I want to give 4 stars to this film, there is no way if someone disagrees, I just want to give 4 stars. Some people may think that one-third of the film starts without knowing who is from Monday to Sunday, but the screenwriter needs you to clearly understand who is who from the beginning. I think this is very clever, let the plot lead you to gradually understand the seven sisters' week names and the personalities and features of the girls in each week, and let the audience take the initiative to recognize and accept the characters, instead of letting the screenwriter inform you what day these girls are.
On the character set:
Monday is calm, calm and ruthless.
Tuesday (there won't be many scenes if the eyeballs are gouged out, I don't know the character design).
Wed is brave, smart, fearless, and likes to fight (finally fell to his death, but the previous fight with the Fertility Bureau was wonderful).
Thursday (has been commanding operations, and finally survived, the person is unclear).
Friday is a computer player, good at arithmetic, high IQ, and calm.
Saturday is sexy, intellectual
Sunday (the first to die, who is unknown).
Seven-week girls all have one thing in common, because they have lived in this small house for a long time, they don’t know who they are, and how to face the people and things in this world. go down. They all have a belief that they want to be themselves, want to continue to live, and want to face the world with their true identity. Seven weeks girls are fighting for it.
Next is the plot. In one sentence, the septuplets were hunted down by the Family Planning Bureau and revealed the real ugly face of cryopreservation, thus saving the children in the world.
This dystopian film actually addresses a real problem, that is, the problems of population, resources, environment, survival, and human nature, which must be considered.
The construction of the plot was successful. I feel like making up stories is like lying, one lie after another, and then creating a series of lies to make up for the previous ones. The lies of this film are well rounded, and I believe the lies told by the screenwriters.
This film convinced me, made me think that overpopulation is such a tragic thing to happen. What the female villain said in the ending probably means this: When I was alive, although the means of reducing the population were cruel, I finally solved the population problem very well. When I die, you can't bear to kill people. When the population continues to grow, it will not be the problem of these children who will die. That is, all human beings will die. (I don't go to hell, who goes to hell)
The film is a bit baggy. Since the film is classified as a science fiction theme, under the combination of the age of technology and the age of the human brain, the development of technology and the dullness of the human brain are inconsistent. (The technology is so powerful, but the human brain is still unaware of the population problem.) The ending of the story is weak, and the film is booing.
Simple and simple review.
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