Acheng ridiculed tuberculosis in the book Common Sense and Common Sense, because many literary images were prone to tuberculosis for a while. So the author says it is a fashionable disease, which is a kind of luck and misfortune. It is also said that the "consumption" of Lin Daiyu in A Dream of Red Mansions is actually tuberculosis. Even boldly inferring Lu Xun's "no mercy" decision, the despair in Wild Grass also has the cause of tuberculosis. The final conclusion is that "the emotion of literary thinking, through the amplifier of disease, can let us see the incomparable charm."
We can't speculate whether the charm of the wind blowing has the external force of tuberculosis. In fact, it is not easy to find the shadow of the original novel in the film. Compared with the original novel, the movie is much less sad. Of course, there will always be clues. For example, does Naoko's bonnet with a thin ribbon blown away by the strong wind bear the infinite tenderness and deep thoughts of Chen Xiong? It's the scene where the hero and heroine are sheltering from the rain with umbrellas in the fields. The director no longer pays attention to men's lamentation that they have not witnessed women's girlhood, but lets women guide men to see the rainbow that appears quietly after the rain.