(Mind that I've written a whole 20 page paper on Nuclear Art internationally.) If you aren't one of them, that's fine. Originally serialised in seven installments in two of She relives the day and relates her strange experience to Kazuo and Gorō.
Most of what we know about his future is that the painting is gone and it appears that his world is post-apocalyptic (fewer people, nature, no baseball et cetera)...and that's where I want to start my personal thoughts.
The novel was first serialized in the Japanese youth magazines Chu-3 Course and Kō-1 Course, from November 1965 to May 1966, and has been regularly re-edited in Japan ever since, notably in 1967 According to the scholar Ulrich Heinze, the novel represents the first fully formed version of time travel as an exploration of The 1983 live-action film is a direct adaptation of the novel, released on July 16, 1983 in Japan by Yasutaka Tsutsui wrote a short story parodying his own novel titled A 5 episode live-action television series was aired on 2016, with This article is about the book. They do not believe her at first, but they are convinced when she accurately predicts the earthquake and ensuing fire. But maybe it was for Chiaki.So I'd say it's safe to say that for both her aunt and Makoto, time-leaping was just an experience that made them wiser and their adolescent time more interesting. The site may not work properly if you don't If you do not update your browser, we suggest you visit Press J to jump to the feed. Right now, I think this might seem very far off, but...please let me talk a lil'.
She seems to be fine with not seeing her loved one again, though and I think that Makoto might eventually relent to that, too.
So yeah, nuclear art and catastrophe are actually quite common themes in Japanese art.
And she had a last time leap left (after the time traveler saved their friend) so when she went back before breaking the walnut, she was able to give it back to him. Art can move certain people.
Looking at updated numbers of deaths (often obscured, because...obviously, the US didn't want them to look so bad as any winning nation in wars - don't take me as an offender now, please, I'm not trying to do that, I'm just stating a fact), the described future seems very much like a result of war with modern means. And she had a last time leap left (after the time traveler saved their friend) so when she went back before breaking the walnut, she was able to give it back to him. )PS: I also believe that the person Makoto's aunt, aunt Witch or aunt Majo, whatever you want to call her, had met back when she could time leap was someone from Chiaki's time, too, although I dislike the idea of him being a con artist (1) he seems a little too blunt and honest for that, 2) we never get any sort of screentime with him and her and 3) the guy in her photo on her desk looks nothing like him - seriously, being slim doesn't qualify for "that looks like Chiaki" End of theory.
So that he was able to go back to his time again, rather than her wasting all of his leaps. I'm not going to go as far as to say that that's the reason since I have nothing else to pinpoint it, but I'd say there's definitely some impending doom. I'd also say that the painting is a sort of beacon of hope for certain people that apparently will be gone in the future unless preserved. Because the time traveler is from the future, she would have the chance of seeing him years down the line, probably when she's a lot older. Funnily enough, that ties with the painting which is so important to Chiaki very well. Ken remains for a month, and Kazuko falls in love with him. Did the main character get all her leaps back when she left back to the past and broke the walnut-thing again?
(What I like about my theory is that it has a lot to do with hope and doing the best you can every day - an interpretation of "Time waits for no one".
His intersection with the girl's life is the accidental effect of a "time-leaping" drug. I hope you enjoyed reading that although this comment is kinda messy and unorganised.I heard the aunt is supposed to be the girl from a live action adaption.New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be castLooks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. )I also want to stress, though, that everyone seems to believe that Chiaki's time must be very, very far in the future. That being the country that was hit by two nuclear bombs leads me to say that it's somewhat prone to catastrophe.