The search for alien intelligent creatures has become fate for my father, he has killed too many people for this, so when Roy takes him out of the ship and leaves the nuclear bomb, he has killed his father. It is not difficult to understand that he pushed his son away and slipped into the abyss of the universe, because returning to the earth was mentally no different from death to him, and physical life was even worse than death. And this is his last love for his son. Because Roy was the only person in nearly 30 years who wanted him to quit his mission and not die.
And for someone who regards tasks as fate, Roy should be a good son. His mission was to destroy the ship, and of course he did. From the time he got on the spaceship to the time he took his father out, there was not much dialogue between the two, but Roy's excuse for his father was just to push the boat, he just took his father away and destroyed the spaceship, without looking into whether there was another secret. It seems that right or wrong doesn't matter, the truth doesn't matter, what matters is that the task gets done. It is true that a father has a son.
There are a lot of inner monologues in the whole film, which is a real literary film in a sci-fi coat. So basically you can ignore the issues at the sci-fi level. The moon chasing scene and the rescue encounter with Wukong are just adding some ups and downs to the too bland plot, and they are more for the box office and for the audience to watch. And the bigger problem is that since it is an inner drama, has Roy's heart changed at the beginning and the end? Understand, feel, grow? Neither seems to. He just did a long trip and took his dad out of a spaceship.
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