The details are okay. At the end, the sequel has changed from a sci-fi movie to a commercial movie.

Waylon 2022-01-04 08:01:41

A documentary science fiction film, not bad!
The details are still quite good, from launch to Europa, the details are in place, especially suitable for small friends to see, popularize common sense of space, and stimulate interest and imagination!
The rationality of the plot is still debatable:
1. The communication was interrupted and I went to fix it, but it was not explained whether it was fixed. If it is not fixed, the final picture cannot be transmitted back. If it is fixed, it will be the first one after they landed. The series of operations must involve the participation of the earth’s command, not just a few people’s democratic voting
. 2. Before landing, there should have been unmanned spacecraft landing and exploring. The things that are done in the movie are basically unmanned spacecraft. Do, and have gotten preliminary conclusions, these basic things have not been figured out, you can go to people, don’t you send them to death...
3. At least there should be a backup for all kinds of detectors. You can’t just bring one, you can’t just go to the broken one. Man. You have to bring tools to fix things. You can't just use it and break it, right? I can’t fix it now, come back first, and go out to fix it when the temperature radiation is right next time. Is it just one of the solar panels? It’s not a problem for the time being.
4. The whole team is not like an advanced well-trained space. The team does not abide by the discipline, all sorts of clinging to its own way. No matter how excited it is, it won’t happen.
There are other unremembered
octopus appearances, e, well, the sequel should become a science fiction commercial film like aliens.

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Extended Reading

Europa Report quotes

  • James Corrigan: [aiming his camera out the window] It's kind of ironic really. So little space in here, and so much space out there.

  • Dr. Samantha Unger: As the ship passed the moon, it had already gone farther than any human being had ever gone before. Think about that. Across all of human history, that moment was the farthest anyone had ever gone. But they still had millions upon millions of miles to go. Our craft was heading for a moon of Jupiter known as Europa.