Write a post-view outline

Josiane 2022-04-23 07:02:05

Lens language: 1) I love long shots 2) It implies that water is flowing like water and grass, the male protagonist stumbles on the space station for the first time, and looks at the zoomed-in camera 3) Confusion is like walking in from the side of a tree and out of a bush in the distance 4) The soundtrack filmed in Ginza on the road is very exciting. Every time the child appears, I feel terrified
. Polymers are human 2) The male protagonist's fear of invisible things and being overwhelmed by guilt (indicating that it is very rare to have a conscience)
Question: The horse is a tied girl, and there is no oil painting. The other two scientists' guests The male protagonist returns to burn The fire is still burning in the snow, the other woman is the mother, the boy is the hero Oedipus?
The ultimate question: There are several wonderful lines, such as the heroine's description of her feelings as a human being. A long series of monologues at the end of the male lead
Summary: After such a cool sci-fi film was made in the 1979s, what else is Hollywood doing? Freak creatures, high-energy weapons, all kinds of dazzling There are no realistic special effects. There are no country houses on earth, alien space stations, and up to four people in each scene. The dialogue, story clues and lens concept alone are enough to make this sci-fi movie very full. We expect that the alien creatures we are facing are an ocean of thinking, and what defeats us is the memories and emotions that we buried deep in our hearts and try to erase, and what evokes mutual understanding is love
. be worshipped... There are so many treasures in non-mainstream places

View more about Solaris reviews

Extended Reading

Solaris quotes

  • Dr. Snaut: Don't tell me you haven't tried a rope or a hammer. Did you happen to throw the inkwell like Luther? No?

  • Kris Kelvin: What was that?

    Dr. Snaut: I don't know. Then again, we've managed to determine a few things. Who was it?

    Kris Kelvin: She died 10 years ago.

    Dr. Snaut: What you saw was the materialization of your conception of her. What was her name?

    Kris Kelvin: Hari.

    Dr. Snaut: Everything began after we started experimenting with radiation. Wehit the Ocean's surface with strong X-ray beams. But it - incidentally, consider yourself lucky. After all, she's part of your past. What if it had been something you had never seen before, but something you had thought or imagined?

    Kris Kelvin: I don't understand.

    Dr. Snaut: Evidently the Ocean responded to our heavy radiation with something else. It probed our minds and extracted something like islands of memory.