String jasmine buds with bamboo sticks, fold banana leaves around them, and tie Simu tightly with thin thread. This is Thailand's traditional handmade Baisri flower basket used to offer sacrifices to heaven, to thank God, and to pray for the safety of lovers. Yi is the florist who made Baisri. He and Qing were once a gay couple who could not be allowed to live in the world. They originally wanted to leave everything and eloped, but Qing chose to leave at the last minute and even married and had a daughter. Many years later, the two were reunited. Qing was single again, but he was terminally ill. In order to pray for him, Qing decided to become a monk, embarking on a path of spiritual practice, turning over abandoned corpses in the forest and falling in love with the two of them that they had never had. Thai director Anucha Pennya Vatana continues the concern for gay issues in Blue time, through the beauty and withering of flowers, perfectly metaphorical emotional gains and losses, and boldly extends his tentacles to Buddhist philosophy, dealing with the issue of death without avoiding lust. Two popular Thai stars, Sugravakarano and Anucha Sampong, changed their sunny male image to play lovers who met again after Qianfan, with sincere and beautiful feelings.