Love is the only rational thing in this world. Many fools rush in love and some are still stuck in the past but love is love. It is the most beautiful, the truest, and the most fragile thing in this world.
Have you experienced loving someone whom you know you’ll eventually need to let go? Knowing that someday, the only ray of sunshine in your life and your only reason to wake up in the morning will only be stuck in your memories like a ghost of yesterday.
Now let me introduce to you my favorite movie, a very simple yet the purest thing that you’ll ever watch. The title of this movie is “A walk to remember”

The artist Mandy Moore, a characteristic stunner in both face and way, stars as Jamie Sullivan, an untouchable at school who is laughed, has values, and dependably wears the equivalent ratty blue sweater. Her dad (Peter Coyote) is a neighborhood server. Shane West plays Landon Carter, a senior kid who hangs with the prominent group yet is shaken when an inept dare turns out badly and one of his companions is injured in a jumping accident. He dates a prevalent young lady and participates in the giggling against Jamie. At that point, as discipline for the trick, he is requested by the essential to join the show club: “You have to meet some new individuals.” Jamie’s in the club. He starts to see her recently. He approaches her to enable him to practice for a job in a play. She treats him with level trustworthiness. She isn’t one of those failures who creeps around feeling put upon; her confidence stands separated from the sentiment of her companions. She’s a keen, decent young lady, an update that one of the joys of the motion pictures is to meet great individuals.

The plot has disclosures that I won’t uncover. Enough to concentrate in transit Jamie’s tranquil precedent makes Landon into a more pleasant individual – urges him to wind up increasingly true and genuine, to win her where she approaches him while he’s with his old companions and says, “See you today,” and he says, “In your fantasies.” When he turns up at her home, she is harmed and furious, and his reasons sound faltering even to him.

The film strolls a barely recognizable difference with the Peter Coyote character, whose congregation Landon visits. Motion pictures have a method for stereotyping reactionary Bible-thumpers who are antagonistic to high schooler sentiment. There is a tad bit of that here; Jamie is illegal to date, for instance, in spite of the fact that there’s more behind his choice than automatic strictness. In any case, when Landon goes to the Rev. Sullivan and requests that he have confidence in him, the priest tunes in with a receptive outlook.

Truly, the motion picture is cheesy now and again. Yet, feebleness is okay now and again. I excused the film it’s a wide feeling since it earned it. It lays things on somewhat thick toward the end, however, by then it had paid its direction. Executive Adam Shankman and his author, Karen Janszen, working from the novel by Nicholas Sparks, have an unforced trust in the material that reclaims, even legitimizes the general terms. They turn out badly just multiple times: The subplot including the incapacitated kid ought to have either been managed, or dropped; It’s tedious to make the dark youngster use “sibling” in each sentence, as though he isn’t their companion yet was ported in from a different universe; As Kuleshov demonstrated over 80 years prior in a renowned test, when a crowd of people sees an apathetic closeup, it supplies the important feeling from the unique situation. It tends to be lethal for a performing artist to attempt to “act” in a closeup, and Landon’s little grin toward the end is a diversion at an essential minute.

Those are little imperfections in a contacting motion picture. The exhibitions by Moore and West are so unobtrusively persuading we’re reminded that numerous youngsters in motion pictures assume like 30-year-old standup funnies. That Jamie and Landon base their sentiment on qualities and admiration will sucker punch a few watchers of the film, particularly since the initial five or 10 minutes appear to be going down a recognizable young motion picture trail. “A Walk to Remember” is a little possession.
