An action movie with a mystery skin

Trenton 2022-04-20 09:01:43

Adaptation subject matter: Philip K. Dick's novel (always the favorite of science fiction movies)
Boys' Feet: Ben Affleck (also the male protagonist of Gone Lover, the screenwriter of Good Will Hunting and Male 4, these two films also Very nice) Female lead
: Uma Thurman (the female lead in Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill~~)
Director: John Woo (action film director)
Content:
The whole story is a reasoning indexed by objects in the male lead's envelope In the drama, each object seems to be unrelated, but in fact it always saves one of the male protagonists or inspires them at the right moment, especially the search for the 15th object is very important. Surprisingly, it is also reasonable, but because Wu The director's action film attributes make the tone of the whole film more focused on Hollywood blockbusters and deviated from some sci-fi film attributes.
The content analysis is too lazy to describe everyone, don't throw eggs. . .
The following paragraph is excerpted from --- foreseeing the future, there will be no future

. The beginning part is relatively boring, but it is just to explain Mike's identity and life. The film started to look good after Mike received a pile of junk from a lawyer and learned that he gave up more than $90 million in equity. The whole story is compact and exciting. There was John Woo at the front, and several action scenes were handled very well.

When the lawyer told Mike that he had voluntarily relinquished his equity, I simply thought it was just forging countless signatures to deprive him of his income. But the plot of the movie goes in another direction, from the lottery lottery draw, and recalling what happened, Mike realizes that these are just the future that he has planned.

If you show someone their future, they have no future, if you take away the mystery, you take away hope.

The most impressive thing is the above sentence, and the future that Mike sees also gives verification: because the fear of the plague will concentrate the patients, which will lead to a larger-scale plague; because of the fear of war, the result will be a more tragic war. And Jimi also thought that he saw the future instead of sending Mike to the overpass, but he ended up losing Qingqing's life.
Seeing Mike in the future, he designed a blueprint for himself to change his future and destiny, arranged the route of travel, and made various pre-deployments. But after his memory was cleared, he was able to move along the vision perfectly, and the people from all walks of life also gave perfect cooperation, which is really incredible. Could it be that this changed future is not just an idea, Mike can also see n possibilities in the future?

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Extended Reading
  • Roselyn 2022-04-21 09:02:12

    From this film, we can see how much progress has been made in motion design and special effects in the past 10 years. If you look at it in 2003, you might think it's still cool? What Lisa said is true, Ben's face has less flesh, it was much plumper back then, but I like him better now, more mature and more flavorful. I have to say, his acting is not as good as his friend Matt :)

  • Aletha 2022-04-22 07:01:31

    If you only look where you can't go, you will miss the riches below.

Paycheck quotes

  • Wolfe: So, you're saying he sent himself a different set of personal items, ones he'd selected after using the machine, and nothing our security would flag.

    Jimmy Rethrick: Everyday things. Combined with the power of foresight, transform Michael from engineer to escape artist.

    [Rethrick looks at the continued computer virus signal and adds grimly:]

    Jimmy Rethrick: I don't know about you, but I'd like to return the favor.

  • [Michael is focusing on the Einstein stamps on the envelope of items]

    Rachel Porter: What?

    Michael Jennings: You know, when I checked this envelope out of Reddy Grant, they told me I signed in twenty items. But there were only nineteen.

    Rachel Porter: I don't understand.

    [He picks up a magnifying glass and examines the Einstein stamps. One of them has a strangely pixelated eye. The camera cuts to a laboratory in which Jennings is examining the stamps under a microscope while Rachel stands behind him. The pixels turn out to be Seattle newspaper headlines, such as "Machine Predicts Future" and "Stock Market Panic."]

    Rachel Porter: [frightened] What are these pictures of?