The movie "The Story of Hachi" is based on a true story that happened in Japan in 1925.
The movie uses flashbacks to tell the hero's story through a young boy, Hazel Ronnie. The movie uses flashbacks to introduce Hachikō through a young boy, Hazel Ronnie, who tells a heroic story. It tells the story of a college professor, Parker (Richard Gere), who adopts a boy. Parker (Richard Gere), a college professor, adopts a baby Akita named Hachi. Every day, Hachi drops the professor off at the station in the morning and waits for him to return home in the evening. Unfortunately, the professor died of an illness and never returned to the station, but Hachi continued to wait at the station every day for the next 10 years until he finally died.
The movie also perpetuates this love, ending with Parker's young grandson Ronnie and his Hachi going on to have a wonderful life, and unlike other movies that are different, this one conveys a sense of hope.
The protagonist is a Japanese Akita from Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan, named Hachi because of the word "Hachi" on his collar. For some reason, Hachi is transported across the ocean, on airplanes and trains, and eventually drifts down to a small American town, where he is forgotten at the train station.
Small Hachi was lost, bouncing around in a sea of people, and suddenly looked up and spotted Parker, an American professor, and it stopped in front of him.
"Hey there, little guy, lost." The professor recognized Hachi's plight at once, as if he were Hachi's confidant, reading it at first sight. It wasn't like it was destiny.
The professor wanted to leave Hachi with Carl, the train station manager, to wait for its owner to claim it, but Carl refused him. After being rejected, the professor resists the pressure to bring it home because his wife, Kate ( Joan E. Len), won't keep it. Len) doesn't own a dog.
With his wife's objections, the professor is forced to find Hachi a foster place, or an adopter. The professor searched the animal shelter, his friend Marianne, his friend Jesse, his students, his friend Khanz all were rejected, and finally went home with Hachi in his arms after posting 10 adoption ads.
Hachi was kicked out of the cottage when he broke Kate's work, and later Kate, distressed for her husband, let Hachi stay another night.
When Kate got the call to adopt, she saw her lover and her daughter having fun with Hachi, and they loved him so much that they agreed to take him in. Since then, Hachi has been accompanying the professor.
No matter what happens in the middle, Hachi is destined to be with the professor, and no one can break their destiny.
Hachi soon grew to be a huge animal, and he liked to follow the professor. The professor had to go to work and locked Hachi in the fence. Hachi went crazy looking for an exit, and when he couldn't find one, he plowed a hole under the fence, drilled out, and chased his master to the train station where he took the train to work. What kind of love is this?
Hachi, who had been to the train station once, ran all the way to the station when he heard the train whistle and sat in a corner of the flowerbed, waiting for his master to return. The moment he saw his master, Hachi warmly greeted him and embraced him.
Since then, no matter how cold or hot it was, Hachi would take his master to the train station almost every day, and would sit in the corner of the flowerbed at the train station, waiting for his master to come back from work, except for one time when he was trapped by a skunk.
When the professor's daughter Andy ( Sarah. Romer ) tells the professor that she is pregnant, the professor happily welcomes her and hugs her daughter, I think Hachi is having a hard time:
Your world still has a loving wife, daughter, friends, etc., while my world is only black and white you, I'm just one of your dogs, while you're my whole world.
On the morning of the professor's sudden death, the professor went to work, and Hachi was so abnormal that he barked at the professor, but the professor didn't understand his language and still walked out of the fence.
Hachi, who had always refused to play catch, chased after the professor with the ball in its mouth and caught up with him the moment he was about to board the train.
It picked up the ball for the first and last time to play catch with the professor. The moment the professor boarded the train, it growled at the door, as if it knew it was a final goodbye, until the train disappeared from sight.
Hachi's special connection is this: I can sense that you're leaving me, and there's nothing I can do to keep you, so I'll just have to spend my last happy moments with you in my own special way.
It was five o'clock in the snowy winter, and Hachi came to the flowerbed of the train station to wait for the professor to get off work, but he didn't wait for the professor until it was dark, and he couldn't wait for him any longer, because his master had gone to the other side of the world.
When the black and white figure appeared in its eyes again, it looked up to see that it wasn't the professor, its excitement faded, and it crawled to the ground in frustration.
The next day, Hachi went to the station again to wait for its master, and when the snow flew in the night, the professor's friend said to it:You don't have to wait for him anymore, he will never come back." Hachi remained indifferent.
Afterwards, Hachi twice ran to the train station from Andy's house, which was far away, to wait for his master. The loyal dog's obsession with waiting for its late master touched many people, and kind-hearted people brought it food. Hachi settled down in the station's square and came to wait for his master on time every day.
As a dog, it has its principles, and its principle is to be loyal to its owner for the rest of its life, never leaving, even if the other party has long been out of this world, but also to keep the principle of the heart.
Spring and fall, Xiaohachi waited for ten years. Ten years, is the life of Xiaohachi, it from a majestic big dog, into an old dog.
One day, ten years later, when Parker's wife saw Hachi still waiting there, she embraced Hachi with a surprised expression and said tearfully, "Old buddy, are you still waiting for him? Can I wait for the car with you?" Seeing this scene, Jesse pulled a tissue and tried to apply snot. I'm sure a lot of people were just as teary-eyed when they saw this.
At the end of Hachi's life, God gave him a wonderful dream, and he was with his owner again, running and hugging happily.
Finally, Hachi and the professor were reunited in heaven, realizing that death and life are the same.
Conclusion
We are touched by the new leaves become fallen leaves, how many transformations in the cycle, the only constant is the figure of standing waiting. Eight public this wordless waiting to witness their most sincere, the most pure love, but also y touched the people beside ......
Perhaps, there are too many betrayal, suspicion and cunning in this world.
As in the movie Carl, the professor just picked up Hachi, let him look after, he refused. When a reporter shows up, he behaves like a clown in order to get involved with Hachi.
We are very much in need of loyalty, trust and peace, and even though dogs can't speak our language, they can communicate their feelings and become a kind of spiritual support, which is why we are touched by the story of Hachi, the loyal dog.
Bugs taught us the meaning of loyalty and that we should never forget who we love.