"Deep Sea Catastrophe": natural disasters, man-made disasters are impermanent, and do and cherish

Danielle 2022-04-23 07:01:56

Not pretentious, not exaggerated, not sensational, not so main theme, very professional, very industrial, very tense narrative, originally and clearly told a story about oil well leaks, explosions, and life-threatening, coupled with awesome special effects, the whole The process of watching the movie has been hanging in my heart, unlike a lot of bad movies that make people feel embarrassed for an hour or two. However, no matter how calmly and objectively this accident is presented, due to the fact that it is adapted from a real event, when the profiles of the victims appear at the end of the film, it is still a peerless tragedy. The once bright eyes and white teeth were endless. Natural disasters, man-made disasters are impermanent, and they are done and cherished.

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Extended Reading
  • Darlene 2022-03-22 09:01:43

    #deep sea catastrophe# Mark Wahlberg is based on the 2010 US Gulf of Mexico disaster. It is really shocking and tearful. The highlight is that the silent film at the end has a strong sense of reality, which makes people feel empathy and pass.

  • Romaine 2021-11-22 18:54:23

    Didn't scare me to death, shocked the back crying

Deepwater Horizon quotes

  • Jimmy Harrell: Listen, you mind losing that tie?

    O'Bryan: I would.

    Jimmy Harrell: It's not the tie. It's, uh... it's the color.

    O'Bryan: Purple?

    Jimmy Harrell: Uh... more magenta.

    O'Bryan: And?

    Jimmy Harrell: Well, magenta alarm on an oil rig is as bad as it gets. That's worthy of superstition.

  • Mike Williams: How you doin', Caleb?

    Caleb Holloway: Hey, Mike, how you doin', man? I was a lot better couple hours ago.

    Mike Williams: Why's that?

    Caleb Holloway: I was asleep.