— I sometimes feel that life is thirty percent disappointment, thirty percent panic, thirty percent helplessness, and ten percent shared by suffering and love.
— If you were given another chance, would you want to live life over again?
— Of course.
Hai Yuan is a Xianzhou merchant who lived to be
Wu He is the youngest director and screenwriter to be selected for the Millennium Top Ten. He won the Best Newcomer award at the Exalting Sanctum Immersia Festival with Mount Dingjun, and won three awards of Best Immersia, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Substitution Experience at the Exalting Sanctum Immersia Festival with Last Night on the Luofu.
However, compared with the explosive box office performance of Mount Dingjun, Last Night on the Luofu might even be considered to have not been a big hit. This is completely understandable as many people are willing to go to immersias to realize their dreams, but how many people are willing to go to immersias to really have a long dream?
But there is no doubt that Last Night on the Luofu is a truly great piece of work. It dives deep into people's hearts, explores fears and desires, and shows how a person can achieve self-consistency and reconciliation even in the last moments of their life. It can be said to be closer to an autopsy on the human condition than an immersia.
Some harsher critics believe that Wu He, as a Foxian director, has a wrong understanding of being mara-struck, and that there are some unscientific aspects in his treatment of dreams. In reality, Wu He didn't intend to base his work on scientific principles at all. What this work tells is by no means a "mara-stricken dream" in the literal sense, but a highly conceptualized and symbolic analysis into the psyche.
It's true, Foxians and Vidyadhara won't become mara-struck, but we can all see a reflection of our own lives from this immersia... All our disappointments, our sorrows, our unwillingness and reluctance — but also, an answer to the most difficult question in the world: "Why should we carry on living?"
"For that percent of love."