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Darby 2022-03-15 09:01:10
Although it is a pseudo-documentary form, it can be considered regular. The implementation of the concept of Human 2.0 seems to have seen the realistic version of Avatar, and it turns out that the human body is the biggest limitation of human beings. The ending is...
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Brett 2022-03-15 09:01:10
Insufficient funds can only be made up with words; insufficient ability can only be made up with ideas. Whether it’s the law of the dark forest or the friendly exchanges between "Arrival" and the film, it’s all human beings’ simple guesses about the existence of other intelligent beings in the universe; whether it’s bugs or illogical, it’s for us who are well frogs and chickens. , Haven't really seen what "me" is, let alone...
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Jerrell 2022-03-14 14:12:30
It's a serious bragging, but pseudo-documentaries are indeed an effective way to save...
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Alex 2022-01-24 08:06:01
I don’t like creativity. Is humanity worth saving? not worth it! I still support the law of the dark jungle. The special effects are really scum, the particles are...
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Reed 2022-01-24 08:06:01
The same as pseudo-documentaries...and also the Human 2.0 project.. Similar to the feeling of "coming"... It's best to start watching in 60...
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Kelli 2022-01-24 08:06:01
The three views of the film are very positive. It is like a teaching propaganda film in the early stage of going deep into space. It is how human beings can correct their position in the universe and how to achieve this step on the existing basis. Obviously, we must protect our earth first. Go down instead of hanging up. I have to mention a bug. There is an earth on the edge of the earth. The brain is good, but how do you think the tides on the earth come from? Then there is no tsunami every...
The Beyond Comments
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Alice Lamont: The brain can live without a body, but the body can't live without its brain. It's that simple notion which drives the Human 2.0 Project. Our aim was to create a prosthesis that could house the human brain, a substitute body. But most importantly, we wanted it to be recognizable as a human.
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Alice Lamont: A transplant hasn't been made into this body yet, so, essentially, it's just a body. It's like... a bit like a computer without a hard drive.