10/10
Another film about young love that will make you think better of yourself.
13 January 2022
When you love music and how some of the best musicians had difficult lives, a reminder of Chet Baker came to mind immediately just because of details from the opening scenes.

The catchall phrase, for me at least, was "I'd be honored."

This is about you and what makes you feel what you feel when saying that to someone because you know it is the right thing to do.

All the cast & crew extended the theme of the film to go beyond yourself by seeing the worst and the best the audience has to look forward to. There are several examples of choosing the easy way and dealing with a conscience that a parent and child relationship does for doing the next right thing, perhaps when you know what love is all about.

A confusing time set out well in this depiction of questions in morality. There is an openness created by the writers and producers of this movie that seems to tell about lessons we all touch upon whether it be sex and money or sports or authority figures. But usually the heart and tongue join somewhere and provides a direction for where a movie takes you and how you feel.

Honor is a gift a person gives to themselves usually because of patterns in their life that reflected on good or poor choices. Sully rang true with a genuine thread of support. He championed a young person and her life knowing the experiences witnessed and the decay it can bring to one soul.

They say it is not a sin if you do not take pleasure in it. But, not what I say while using a line from another movie where one person had to save honor for their family, friends, or loved one(s). It is not selfish to take care of yourself.

The scenes told a story that easily captured a cultivating mind who wants an easy life of pleasure, not necessarily one of passion. You can have both. Usually what is harder is better for many who choose the acting movie career and all those people necessary in order to create a good product using people more than a machine.

Emily filled the bill in all regards for a good ending with Sons & Daughters and their parents or caretakers noted so well in a healthy film attempting to find justice in all that we do.

Thank you kindly.
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