IMDb RATING
6.9/10
973
YOUR RATING
In a universe of parallel worlds, two lovers search for a place to belong.In a universe of parallel worlds, two lovers search for a place to belong.In a universe of parallel worlds, two lovers search for a place to belong.
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Featured review
The idea is really romantic and unique. It's cold; but it's important for you feel the 'cold' to romantically realise what 'warmth' is. That coldness is a vital part of the story (which's directly proven in a particular scene of the story).
Both the movies: 'To Every You I've Loved Before' and 'To the Solitary Me Who Loved You' follow the story of two studious students who seem to love each other but never fell in love. They married but there seems to be no love involved in that either. The girl had a nice attitude but it was mostly cold.
It appeared that the girl gave more importance to the child than her husband; this kills romance; some people don't see kids as a sign of romance (you know it's -> Japan).
There's a lot of science and nerdy stuff. Which makes its further unromantic and confusing altogether.
There's also a sister movie set in a parallel world which adds the romantic element to the whole story.
Some say that the idea is not realised properly, representation could be better; but it's really hard to come up with a better idea than spreading the story across two movies to make it easier to understand.
I know it takes great efforts and IQ to understand the entire mechanism. Pausing and rewinding movie several times is inevitable.
You've gotta trust me. There are movies with such nice story which fail at just marketing and don't get popular. It's one of them.
Both the movies: 'To Every You I've Loved Before' and 'To the Solitary Me Who Loved You' follow the story of two studious students who seem to love each other but never fell in love. They married but there seems to be no love involved in that either. The girl had a nice attitude but it was mostly cold.
It appeared that the girl gave more importance to the child than her husband; this kills romance; some people don't see kids as a sign of romance (you know it's -> Japan).
There's a lot of science and nerdy stuff. Which makes its further unromantic and confusing altogether.
There's also a sister movie set in a parallel world which adds the romantic element to the whole story.
Some say that the idea is not realised properly, representation could be better; but it's really hard to come up with a better idea than spreading the story across two movies to make it easier to understand.
I know it takes great efforts and IQ to understand the entire mechanism. Pausing and rewinding movie several times is inevitable.
You've gotta trust me. There are movies with such nice story which fail at just marketing and don't get popular. It's one of them.
- anonymoushobbyist
- Feb 24, 2025
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis film and its parallel tale To Every You I've Loved Before (2022), both about parallel worlds, share the same release date of October 7 2022
Similarly, Yomoji Otono's novel adaptations of "Kimi o Aishita Hitori no Boku e" and "Boku ga Aishita Subete no Kimi e" released on the same date of June 23 2016.
- ConnectionsFollows To Every You I've Loved Before (2022)
- How long is To the Solitary Me Who Loved You?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Nhắn Gửi Một Tôi, Người Đã Yêu Em
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $429,205
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
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