
One lesson I learned: Try not to bring your partner to watch a Japanese (or Korean for that matter) romance movie after her makeup workshop.  Cynthia was weeping profusely throughout the movie, like the rest of the girls around us in the theater.  I had no idea it was that emotional.  The title sounds harmless.  Based on a Japanese manga, “I Give My First Love To You (僕ã®åˆæ‹ã‚’ã‚ãƒŸã«æ§ã)” centers around two young lovers engaged in a love relationship that has a time limit.  This is not a spoiler.  Within the very first few seconds into the show, the narrator said so.  Cynthia and I exchanged a look and we mouthed: Uh oh.  Throughout the movie, I tried to ask Cynthia to be strong, don’t cry.  Poor girl, the new make-up was still fresh from the workshop.  That did not work.
Takuma has a rare heart disease. Â And the doctor said that he will not live beyond the age of 20. Â Mayu, the daughter of the doctor, is Takuma’s childhood sweetheart. Â On screen, they look like the cutest couple on earth – both the pair of the child actors (when the story was rewound) and the adult actors (in present time). Â In fact, the four of them are so adorable to look at. Â As far as the story goes, it is the classic Japanese / Korean tragic romance formula that some if not many subscribe to and keep subscribing to – like I!.
Because Takuma has a very weak heart, there is not much he can do but to stay relatively inactive trying to live life to the fullest. Â His approach to love , I would say, is reckless bravery. Â Mayu, on the other hand, is one interesting character. Â How far would she go to keep this love going knowing that this love has a time limit? Â Does she love Takuma out of pity? Â Or deeper than that? Â Her approach to love, I would say, is relentless loyalty. Â Putting these two characters together, you would expect some interesting fireworks. Â Meanwhile, the parents of Takuma and the father of Mayu have played excellent supporting roles. Â One would cry seeing them act. Â My heart ached.
I think, in a more reflective level, “I Give My First Love To You” got me pondering upon loving someone in our temporal existence. Â How long does love last? Â Knowing the fact that love has a time limit, would you still give that love to someone? Â And knowing, by that I mean consciously knowing that no love last forever (in a non-poetic sense), what would you do differently each day? Â I recently read a book. Â The author joked that the best love ends in death. Â In a morbid sense, I cannot agree more. Â Better than ending in a breakup or a divorce paper, eh?
To end this post, I would like to make a noteworthy mention of the young Japanese actress Mao Inoue.  Japan has plenty of photogenic actresses but not many can act in a multitude of dimensions, which this film has plenty of opportunities for Mao Inoueto to shine.  I am not entirely certain if she is a kyÅ«dÅka.  But the way she handles the Japanese archery looks authentic to me.