I just asked this question in the guidance. On the whole, I think it may have something to do with the social environment at that time. The film is constantly interspersed with reports of the shooting incident in the President's Cup. In that environment, Jenny was traumatized in her dark childhood with her divorced father. She always longed for freedom and refused to be bound. At the beginning of the film, they were still hiding in the fields and praying that they would become flying birds. During Forrest Gump's trip to Vietnam, she wandered around, experiencing the social corrosion of that era and the depravity of young people. He began to take drugs and indulge himself, and finally wanted to end his life (she climbed onto the roof to jump), and finally came down, because she still had unfinished wishes and she still loved Forrest Gump deeply, so she went back and gave Forrest Gump a good night and left. I thought she wanted to leave and die peacefully, but she did. After seeing her in the second half of the film, Forrest Gump said that she just got off work and her home was in a mess, which showed that she seriously fulfilled her role as a mother. She has been paying attention to Forrest Gump for three years, and finally she married Forrest Gump. I think on the one hand, she wants to make up for Forrest Gump's wishes, on the other hand, she wants to satisfy the audience's ideas. Personally, she feels that their feelings have nothing to do with secular marriage principles. I think the director is trying to explain a spirit. Forrest Gump's spirit changed Jenny and Captain Dan, and Ah Q's spirit lifted China people,,,,
Personal originality, Shen Jing