In Beijing in December, it gets colder at night. After working all day, eating and drinking at around 6 o'clock, and going to the cinema, I can't resist the tiredness caused by this warmth, and I will fall asleep after shaking my head for a while. Therefore, it is recommended not to eat too much before watching a movie, and to rest well in advance, so as not to miss the wonderful scene.
As a not-so-engaged sci-fi fan and a Pitt fan in general, I still enjoyed the 124-minute movie (although I accidentally slept over 20 minutes after the first 10+).
If you ask me what I see, it's definitely not just those cockpits, spaceships, orange space suits, those ladders like connecting N space stations, and big adventures in space. As a general sci-fi fan, I don't get tired of watching it, and it's a bit different from the sci-fi movies I've seen before (though not much). In one sentence, it is: an astronaut with very rare physical and psychological qualities, with a tired and old face, went through hardships and dangers to find "where is Dad" in space.
After reading it, I have two questions:
1. Is the Earth really so lonely? (After spending astronomical amounts of money and human and material resources, only to find out that there are only humans in the sky? - Can you enjoy exclusive resources, or feel lonely for a hundred years and ten thousand years?)
2. How should we get along with our loved ones? (Since we were able to make our own decisions, we chose to stay away from our parents, partners, and children, enter a refined and perfect system, and were shaped into a so-called advanced human machine, but often ignored the fate that might have been good—and they may have is the best antidote to loneliness)
Finally, let’s talk about an interesting point in the film. The story is set in the “near future”. The protagonist Roy (Brad Pitt) has a scene to adjust the time. The screen shows that it is about 212X. Space on a spacecraft - with today's technological progress, will we be reading this article on Mars in 100 years?
God knows.
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