Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Why did Mitsui's paragraph "Coach, I want to play basketball" get such a high evaluation?

Why did Mitsui's paragraph "Coach, I want to play basketball" get such a high evaluation?

Most post-80s and post-90s boys, especially those who love basketball, have long regarded the classic line "Slam Dunk Master" as an inspirational stalk, and some people have turned it into a sad or self-deprecating joke. For example,

When a fat man who has not exercised for a long time makes up his mind to lose weight, he will say, "coach, I want to play basketball";

The overtime dog tortured by the boss will say "coach, I want to hit someone";

A ten thousand-year-old single king will say, "coach, where is my haruko?"

Perhaps the above is a way for the generation that watched the slam dunk master grow up to cherish their youth and inspire themselves.

I asked many friends around me, who is my favorite dunk player? Many people's answer is the protagonist Hanamichi Sakuragi. I remember two friends gave different answers. One likes Sendoh Akira, and the other enjoys Mitsui Hisashi best. When I heard these answers, I was deeply impressed by them. You guys really have good taste. One is a veteran rambler who has seen countless movies, and the other is a high IQ prostitute who loves basketball.

Although Mitsui Hisashi is a supporting role in Slam Dunk, this role is more flesh-and-blood than any other protagonist, and the role is fuller and more real. His experience can arouse the public's voice and make all teenagers and people in their twenties feel the same way. Maybe when we were young, each of us had the shadow of "Mitsui" more or less. We grew up smoothly, relying on our pride and self-esteem and experienced setbacks. This is a watershed in life. Some lucky people, such as Mitsui, can meet a "good coach" prodigal son at a critical moment. If you are unlucky enough, your lighthouse does not appear at the critical moment, no one helps you, and you are allowed to fall, and your life may be ruined.

I didn't expect to lose so thoroughly in the basketball court where Mitsui wanted to go back but couldn't. His bloody face, flowing long hair and missing front teeth all show Mitsui's decadence and regret. This is a sports boy who used to be proud of himself, and his self-esteem can't bear it. When Mitsui saw coach Anxi, his eyes filled with tears for an instant ... Mitsui must have recalled coach Anxi and said to him, "Coach, I want to play basketball." This scene of "Slam Dunk Master" deserves to be a classic scene in the comic book industry. At the moment, the background music "Until the End of the World" has just the right atmosphere, creating a classic flashback picture, with music, plot and characters intertwined, reaching the climax of emotional rendering. Seeing this, the audience can't help but be moved by the prodigal son's tears. This song has also become the iconic BGM of Mitsui and a classic melody to remember youth. . .

Until more than twenty years later, when we think of this scene again and hear this song, we will unconsciously think of Mitsui Hisashi's tears kneeling on the ground and the sentence "Coach, I want to play basketball".