A particularly nostalgic story. Audrey Hepburn, Marilyn Monroe, Billy Wilder… Roman Holiday, The Seven Year Itch, Witness for the Prosecution… From black and white to color films, let's revisit that creative cinematic world and those old movies that still seem interesting today.
A sudden time travel reveals the New York of 1940. It's World War II, a bloody conflict marked not only battlefield bloodshed but also ideological confrontation. As the epicenter of the world, New York undoubtedly teemed with the brightest minds of the era. Hemingway, Asimov, Lewis Sinclair, John Steinbeck, Pearl S. Buck, Maugham, Gide, Lin Yutang, Fitzgerald... And then there were those fighting the Axis powers in Europe, Camus, Agatha Christie, George Orwell, Arthur C. Clarke... Ernie exclaimed, "Everyone here is a talent. I love it!"... Years later, a young man, a veteran of both battlefields and studies, emerges with a gun in one hand and a pen in the other, shining brightly and rising in this golden age of literature...
[Rebirth] [High School] [Campus Life] [Slice of Life] [Light Entertainment]
Li Luo is a 35-year-old unemployed... or rather, a "flexibly employed" individual.
After graduating, he wrote novels, filmed short dramas, dabbled in music, delivered takeout, ran a street food stall, and even worked as a customer service rep for a Taobao lingerie store.
And now, Li Luo has been reborn back to the early summer when he was 15 years old.
What matters most in this second chance at life?
Making money! Making money! Making money!
But with the high school entrance exams just around the corner, he’d better focus on studying first.
Yu Shao, a national Go master, transmigrated to a parallel world and became a high school freshman. Given a second chance at life, he only wanted to enjoy a carefree and flamboyant youth, ensuring it wouldn’t slip through his fingers again.
But… why am I picking up Go pieces again?!
Although playing in a Go world untouched by harsh AI training makes it all too easy to dominate an era—it’s undeniably satisfying on some level.
[…]
A group of professional Go players: “Wait, you can play Go like this?”
Yu Shao nodded: “Yes, this is how Go is played!”