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Replay

Replay

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I had read it twenty years ago and I did not remember anything about "Replay", except that I did liked it a lot.

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Pues esto es lo que le ocurre a nuestro protagonista Jeff , tras ser consciente de que le está dando un ataque al corazón en 1988 a los 43 años se despierta en 1963 con 18 años de nuevo, en su habitación de la residencia universitaria. Haceos una idea el desconcierto, todo exactamente igual que lo que ya vivió excepto él, que tiene los recuerdos que tenía al morir.Leo grows up right before your eyes as he pores over his father’s diary—the autobiography of Giorgio, age of thirteen. His world opens up as he struggles to find his own reflection in his young father. How would you live your life if you can start it again at the very beginning of it? Combined with the knowledge and experience accumulated during your previous lives? Will this be an obstacle or will be a priceless help when wandering around in an known - unknown world,with so many questions without reply?

GitHub - fraxiinus/ReplayBook: Play, manage, and inspect

Of course, things get more complicated as the replays become shorter and shorter, each time beginning a few months or years closer to Jeff's unavoidable date of death, which never changes. Some of the replays are far from happy, and Jeff realizes that even with several lifetimes to live, there's never enough time to avoid regrets. In the end, living is about recognizing that, and always moving forward. Westbrook, Caroline (October 19, 2010). "Groundhog Day Review". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved January 29, 2023.Eventually, and this may be a spoiler, though I do think it is predictable (but if you haven't read the book maybe you shouldn't read from here: he finds a woman who is a replayer too. Together they make the world a much worse place. They don't intend to, but anyone with half a brain could see that their actions together were bound to result in terrible things. Spoiler ends here. At the baseball training camp, the two boys had complicated feelings training with others, as they are the perfect partners in pitching and catching. The seme taught a younger student how to catch uke’s throw, he also watched the professional catcher 嶋 in the field. The seme offered to cut uke’s fringe, he told the uke to go to N University and he will meet good catchers even if it’s not him… The seme 真篠 律 (catcher) and uke 水原 悠太 (pitcher) are in their last year of high school, they’ve been baseball partners for 10 years, since they first met in 3rd grade when the big boys didn’t want to play with them. These two are best friends and the classmates all call them a married couple, the seme is the wife and the uke is the husband. They’ve now completed the playoff season, the team lost at the district finals, so the boys have retired and switched to study mode for university entrance exams.

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During one subsequent replay, Jeff takes notice of a highly acclaimed film, Starsea, that has become a huge success at the box office in 1974. The film is written and produced by an unknown filmmaker, Pamela Phillips, who has recruited Steven Spielberg to direct and George Lucas as a special effects supervisor, before the two shot to stardom with their own projects. Because the film did not exist in previous replays, Jeff suspects that Pamela is also experiencing the same phenomenon. He locates her and asks her questions about future films which only a fellow replayer would know, confirming his suspicions. In REPLAY’s self-led experience, you can build your own worlds, invent your own games, be inspired by others and leave ideas for players to come. It's just such a shame that this amazing premise gets squandered. Jeff, and then Jeff and Pamela when he meets her during his third replay, speculate a little as to the cause and reason behind their staggered, spiralling reincarnations. Yet there is no payoff. None. We never learn why or how they keep reliving their lives, just that they have learned some big lesson about making the most out of their futures. Except I'm pretty sure that Jeff is just going to continue evaluating women's worth as sex objects and being a terrible husband, because he is the worst. By contrast, there is very little discussion of religion or politics or anything that would get people all "RILED UP" in Replay. So ... maybe that's why this book didn't become an "international sensation" like the DaVinci Code. I don't care about baseball but this one-shot didn't even have that much of it actually. Yes, Ritsu and Yuta talk about baseball a fair bit: they played it throughout the school, after all. But they don't play anymore: they are "retired" i.e. they are not in their school's team anymore because their graduation is closing and they are busy with university exams.Leo is a boy with big dreams and a large family that doesn't understand him and a dad that changed after a accident . He starts questioning when he finds his dad's diary when he was thirteen and he learns about a aunt that he has never knew about and joins the school play. Will his family accept who he wants to be? This is pretty much the textbook example of male gaze. It's painful to listen to this for hours on end. Now I know what's like for women to watch or read most movies or books. So, yeah. Thanks, Replay, for helping me to build empathy with how women feel in our society by being so terribly creepy? I think? Well see Bill Murry is in this small town and for some reason he wakes up there every day and it's the same day. He's living Ground Hog day over and over and he needs to learn.... Those stories are basically retellings of Replay. So many of the events, solutions, even the focus on Kennedy, gambling, and building brand new careers, repeating a whole lifetime over and over, learning and attempting bold crazy schemes, are the same.



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