When I was watching this product on TV, I was
surprised by the direction in that.
Let me explain the story. There is a high
school girl. She was a hopeful track-and-field athlete, but she had an
accident. She had to give up being an athlete. She started to do part-time work
in a family restaurant after school. She started to love the store manager.
The manager was forty-five years old, a
middle-aged man.
I was almost the same age at that time.
This story gave me encouragement.
The manager also had a sad story in his
life. He was divorced. He wanted to be a novelist, but he was still a manager.
One rainy day, they met. The story went on
with them showing their sad pasts.
There was a big difference between the
girl’s past and the manager’s past.
They showed the girl’s past with normal
pictures, but the point is the manager’s past. They showed the manager’s past
intentionally as four-by-three-resolution pictures. Once, all the pictures in a
TV show were in four-by-three. Now we are watching sixteen-to-nine resolution.
When we look at the TV now, if the TV station is on air and has recorded old
pictures, the picture changes to four-to-three. Then, we realized it was an old
picture.
The animation crew used that effect as the direction.
The girl and the manager belong to different generations.
I don’t know whether the direction worked
or not, but I remember a similar direction.
Once, memories were all monochrome.
I remember a drama was on air with a
colored picture. A character started one’s memory, and a monochrome picture
started to show past incidents.
I think this direction is not often used
these days. Maybe the younger generation hasn’t experienced monochrome movies
and TV. This direction could be hard to take now.
My parents’ generation enjoyed monochrome
movies when they were young. They might never think monochrome would be a
symbol of the past. Furthermore, most people would forget about monochrome.
Now, we are enjoying social media. It will be a symbol of the past, and everyone will forget about it someday.
Proofreading
by ProofreadingServices.com
Picture
by Illust Design's Lab

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