My fourteenth theatrical film of 2020.
To be honest, the original intention of watching this film was for the visual effects of the doomsday. As a result, I accidentally peeped at the whole process of the emotional redemption of the Butler couple.
After two long hours, you will find that the end of the day is just a big gimmick. Except for the disaster pictures displayed in the very limited audio-visual equipment, all the depictions of the "doomsday" are for the recovery of the protagonist's feelings during the escape process, and the end of the day is coming. The human nature of the past and all kinds of good, evil, beauty and ugliness served, and when the deliberate conflict and the protagonist's halo filled the whole film, I hated the words "escape from the end of the day", and I hated the deceptive poster. .
I have to say that Uncle Butler is really lucky to save his marriage and family through the end of the world. And I, in the hall of three people, endured the whole process of a pair of men and women who were not smoking brightly, chatting loudly without a mask, the sound of eating, and the interference of taking turns going out. If you don't want to watch, get out. Mobile phones, bullshit, streets, parks, toilets, wherever you like to go, how far are you paralyzed!
PS: There is a clear reminder on the ticket-buying APP: you must wear a mask throughout the movie viewing, and you are prohibited from eating and drinking. Can a complaint be made if the theater staff does not act?
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