After watching the 3D version of this film in the theater, I was always attracted by the plot, beginning with the magnificent natural scenery and the positive enthusiasm of the explorers. Minutes before Judy's death, it was still the explorers' admiration for the magical nature and passion for exploring the unknown.
However, under the sudden turn of the plot, Judy encountered a dangerous situation, Frank took the risk and Judy supplied the respirator (even non-professionals can see from the film that this is extremely dangerous), at the line of life and death, Judy and Frank snatch the respirator , and finally died.
Since then, the film has almost always been in a tense atmosphere. This group of people has to fight for their own survival. Every time a difficulty is passed, there is a new one, and people continue to die. In such a dangerous situation, no matter the person leading the team or each player, a high degree of concentration is required. Any misjudgment will lead directly to death. Frank isn't perfect, an overly rational analysis of a teammate's death makes him feel inhumane, and he doesn't understand Karl and his son's anger at him. But as the team leader, he completely fulfilled his responsibilities, that is, he was responsible for the safety of this group of people to the best of his ability. Two of his friends and longtime collaborators, Luke and George, can be seen in the film and can fully understand him.
What I feel most deeply and most curiously is why those explorers risk their lives and abandon their comfortable environment to explore the unknown world. In the film, Carl, the rich man who burns money to explore, is obviously not a real explorer, but is at most a thrill-seeker. Frank's words may reveal that after Victoria's death, "new hatred and old hatred" alternated, and his son asked him why he wanted to cave. He replied that under the cave, he could make it all make sense, as if it were his church, and he could hold a mirror and say, this is me. For Frank, the exploration of the cave is like his temple. He has not given up or lost anything. This is his choice, his life, the meaning of his life.
Finally, some children's shoes don't like it, this is purely personal preference. If you like children's shoes in drama films, you probably won't like them too much, because the plot is not complicated; or if you really like children's shoes in romance films that must have emotional scenes, you won't like them either.
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