Buried (2010) : Movie Plot Ending Explained Buried is the tragic story of Paul Conroy (played by Deadpool fame Ryan Reynolds) who wakes up to find himself in a coffin buried under the ground. Also, it's easy to choose a specific thing to talk about in the show, because there's so much emphasis placed on the themes and the lessons that the short movie is trying to teach it's viewers. He misses Yukino. Garden of Eden, in the Old Testament Book of Genesis, biblical earthly paradise inhabited by the first created man and woman, Adam and Eve, prior to their expulsion for disobeying the commandments of God.

Even if they were caught in a downpour, it didn't bother him as long as he was with her. In the universe where Mitsuha had foreseen the disaster, she recruited the help of her friends, Teshigawara and Sayaka, to try to obviate casualties. However he hates the fact that he's 15 and thus considered a "kid". This is the final passage of the novel. Sometimes you need both of these things in order to get through everything that is haunting you. So what's being said with all the rain?The first obvious thing to point out is that the song used at the end of the movie was "Rain". With Yukino, she either doesn't know what she wants to do or has lost track of it; there's hints that she has a love of classic literature but since she was "bullied" out of school she can't teach and therefore doesn't know what she should do.Possibly most important is that Yukino is in an "unhealthy" state of mind.

This leads to the final scene where she runs barefoot out of the apartment, without putting any shoes on. She makes the mature decision of moving to a different place to try to practice walking on her own again. Up until now they had always been waiting for rain but when Takao finds the answer to the tanka he finds her before it starts to rain.

Takao thinks she loves him and confesses but she reminds him that she's a teacher as her response.

Even with Yukino, he was afraid that she would tell him that his goal was stupid and that he should give up. I think “In the Garden” is popular at funerals because it offers a different kind of comfort than the kind provided to Mary Magdalene, and that the garden is a different kind of garden than we see in John. We can't have a concrete or official answer, unless the author says so.. All we can do is land on speculations.In Kimi no Na wa, Yukino taught at Itomori High School, which I think is somewhere at or around Hida. Weathering With You is the latest blockbuster anime romance from Makoto Shinkai, the director behind 2016's Your Name. In the commentary Shinkai stated specifically that when the umbrellas were open it symbolized the characters isolating themselves and when they were closed it was them being honest.Shorter article this time, looking at what The Garden of Words was trying to teach us as viewers and what it taught its characters.Wrote two so quickly back to back because even though it's mid September, I'm NOT waiting until October because I have 5 panels to prepare for (and 1 that's a gimme). WARNING: The following article contains spoilers for Weathering With You. Thanks for reading.Great read.

He's alone. In this film however the rain brings the two characters to a different world where they can be together. By Ruchika Gupta . I remember when I watched the movie nothing really about the characters stuck with me at all but what made the film good to watch was this lovely use of symbolism throughout.

If you have seen Garden of Words, in the novel that Makoto wrote after the movie, the two main characters met again after a few years in the same garden. :P Gotta start doing more of that.Not sure that adds much to what you already said, but I really liked those bits. I guess she died there. She's indirectly telling him that she can do it by herself, she doesn't need someone else. Why? Michael Rucker/Getty Images. Or wach again and again the two films.That's the problem with Makoto Shinkai works, they're all open-ended..@Aogiri How exactly is Shinkai-san's works being open-ended a problem? It's only passed for me personally by 5 Centimeters Per Second which I hope to write about in the future as well.

THey both stay under the gazebo and feel like nothing else matters. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Anime & Manga Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for anime and manga fans.

It only takes a minute to sign up.So the question is, as per the events that happened in Kimi no Na wa: A comet fell on Mitsuha's hometown, killing a third of the people.I don't believe Yuki-chan sensei (that's her name in the credits, ユキちゃん先生) died in the Itomori Accident. They end up constantly looking forward to the rainy days.Which brings up the interesting flip that Shinkai employed in this film. Takao shows Yukino that he has his life together and inspires her to do the same. But she's still learned to walk on her own, which brings me to the next topic.This is equally as important if not more so than the rain idea.