Both have that feel of the 90's with the MSN, letters, and warm friendships that eventually blossoms into something more.
Let’s just say that it has the same vibes just different plot and storyline and how the timelines goes by…. It’s a cute family past story thingy that someone might enjoy watching so I think u’ll like it… but for the wig thingy….. I don’t know…. I still need an explanation as to WHY they try so hard for that awkward hairdo…. ?
The feels are very the same. They both focus on heavy topics, such as familial trauma and societial views, but they also both emphasize the power and warmth familial love can bring.
Remember me follows a group of friends as they grow up, fall in love, leave each other and reunite. It is a very flowy kind of telling. It feels light hearted with the use of the humour and the focus on the happiness friendship and familial love can bring, but at the same time it mentions some pretty heavy feelings and actions.
Just like go ahead, it is one of my favorites. It makes me feel like they took a piece of life and filmed it for you, to realise that even if things go badly, there will still be a time where we heal and can be happy. Thwy are both stories of letting go and embracingff the other for who they are.
Remember me follows a group of friends as they grow up, fall in love, leave each other and reunite. It is a very flowy kind of telling. It feels light hearted with the use of the humour and the focus on the happiness friendship and familial love can bring, but at the same time it mentions some pretty heavy feelings and actions.
Just like go ahead, it is one of my favorites. It makes me feel like they took a piece of life and filmed it for you, to realise that even if things go badly, there will still be a time where we heal and can be happy. Thwy are both stories of letting go and embracingff the other for who they are.
Like "Remember Me", "Osmosis" integrates people with special needs in the plot. In "Remember Me", Name suffers from selective mutism and Champon needs a wheelchair. In "Osmosis", James, the main lead (James Ramada with some heartbreaking scenes), also has selective mutism, Paolo (JC Santiago, also very convincing) is a stutterer, and Diego/Dante (Harwin Medez, frughteningly realistic) suffers from Dissociative Identity Disorder. In contrast to "Remember Me", "Osmosis is a low budget production, but it's worth watching anyway.