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The original was posted on /r/movies by /u/Logical-Safe2033 on 2024-04-07 21:44:35.
For me it was One Day (Anne Hathoway and Jim Sturges). I was 18 when it came out, and a film that depicted too young people discovering adulthood is messy, disillusioned and flawed was the last thing I wanted to see. I hated it intensely, finding it pointless, depressing and unnecessary.
Now that I’m in my 30s and have lived my own messy, disillusioned and flawed life, I have a great deal more appreciation for it. It definitely has its flaws, but it it honest and has a clear message I hadn’t wanted to hear before.
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