Christina, can you hear me?
I don't know if you can, but I'm talking to you, baby.
Do you know how much I love you?
I loved you the moment I saw you.
I love you now
and I'll love you forever.
No goodbye.
There's only love, Christina.
Only love.
"The Perfect Storm" is really not a disaster film that considers the audience, the victims have a small space to display, and the similar emergency scenes are dizzying Sleeping, there is no hero with great skills, and there are not even a few big scenes to watch. Picking up the "One Hundred Thousand Fires" or "The Living Fire City" is more exciting than it.
It is precisely because of this that when all the members were killed and Bobby, who was about to be swallowed up by the raging sea, said the above paragraph of dialogue in the vast sea and sky, it was so straight to the heart. In an instant, the first hour or so changed from a technical Hollywood shot to the extraordinary struggle of a group of ordinary fishermen to get back to the side they love; in an instant, the dying struggle towards the unsuspenseful ending became so worthwhile.
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