Aliens always come to save the earth

Elenora 2022-04-22 07:01:16

Saw the movie with Oppa yesterday, The Day the Earth Stood Still. After reading it, I only said one sentence, what is this filming? It's a really bad movie!
Originally, Oppa himself was watching, but I only glanced at the male god Keanu Reeves.
Only in the section where Keanu Reeves makes a big move, it's a little cool.
The male protagonist asked the Minister of Defense, is this your planet?
Why are there always aliens or other aliens to save the earth? Save the planet by destroying humanity.
How are human beings so heinous? What human beings do is to survive, for a better life, and perhaps indeed destroy the environment. Perhaps we can collectively call them environmental propaganda films.
The other is the parasitic beast I just saw, a Japanese movie. He discussed some profound issues such as human nature, but in the end it was reduced to discussing environmental protection issues. The last paragraph is indeed a bit thunderous.
Okay, let's talk about this movie again.
Of course, what the film is made of is the reflection of human beings, at least the reflection of the director himself.
In fact, I prefer the kind of doomsday shown in 2012, which is the cause of natural discovery, not the destruction of the earth by humans. The entire narrative of the film lacks logic. In order to save the earth, the extraterrestrial civilization wants to destroy human beings, but in the end, it is at the last moment, and the turning point is very special and abrupt.
The most tiring part was the conversation between Levis and an old man in Chinese. They wanted to fast-forward to the past.

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Extended Reading

The Day the Earth Stood Still quotes

  • Helen Benson: I need to know what's happening.

    Klaatu: This planet is dying. The human race is killing it.

    Helen Benson: So you've come here to help us.

    Klaatu: No, *I* didn't.

    Helen Benson: You said you came to save us.

    Klaatu: I said I came to save the Earth.

    Helen Benson: You came to save the Earth... from us. You came to save the Earth *from* us.

    Klaatu: We can't risk the survival of this planet for the sake of one species.

    Helen Benson: What are you saying?

    Klaatu: If the Earth dies, you die. If you die, the Earth survives. There are only a handful of planets in the cosmos that are capable of supporting complex life...

    Helen Benson: You can't do this.

    Klaatu: ...this one can't be allowed to perish.

    Helen Benson: We can change. We can still turn things around.

    Klaatu: We've watched, we've waited and hoped that you *would* change.

    Helen Benson: Please...

    Klaatu: It's reached the tipping point. We have to act.

    Helen Benson: Please...

    Klaatu: We'll undo the damage you've done and give the Earth a chance to begin again.

    Helen Benson: Don't do this. Please, we can change. We can change.

    Klaatu: The decision is made. The process has begun.

    Helen Benson: Oh God.

  • Professor Barnhardt: There must be alternatives. You must have some technology that could solve our problem.

    Klaatu: Your problem is not technology. The problem is you. You lack the will to change.

    Professor Barnhardt: Then help us change.

    Klaatu: I cannot change your nature. You treat the world as you treat each other.

    Professor Barnhardt: But every civilization reaches a crisis point eventually.

    Klaatu: Most of them don't make it.

    Professor Barnhardt: Yours did. How?

    Klaatu: Our sun was dying. We had to evolve in order to survive.

    Professor Barnhardt: So it was only when your world was threated with destruction that you became what you are now.

    Klaatu: Yes.

    Professor Barnhardt: Well that's where we are. You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve. This is our moment. Don't take it from us, we are close to an answer.