Definition of life and death

Providenci 2022-04-20 09:02:10

The film has nothing to say. These few days, I go to bed at seven or eight in the morning every day, and I must watch a movie before going to bed. That's right I start to lose sleep at night and start to stay in bed again during the day.
When life is turned upside down, the original time will also be turned upside down.

Maybe I'm in another world where I sleep during the day and open my eyes at night. And the 9-to-5 me is still living in another world as usual.

Because the two worlds cannot be connected or crossed with each other, there is no way to prove anything.

I have always felt that the two worlds of life and death or flesh and spirit are combined. They use different skills to perceive the world they are in. The sense of smell, touch, and taste at one end cannot be sensed, and they may use other way, who knows? Maybe they also call it smell, touch, taste, not necessarily. It's just a pity that these perception skills are not compatible in different systems, so the two worlds move forward on the same timeline, use the same space, and overlap, but they do not overlap each other.

As for the cognition of life and death told in the film, I don't catch a cold at all, and I don't even like the directors who go to great lengths to explain these value discussions that have no universal significance. Even if the suspense on this basis is opened, it will be nothing, right?

When I was extremely sleepy, I still watched this film completely, which shows that I do have such a wretched tendency, that is: as long as I have a beautiful face, I can finish a film.

However, the type of girl that Anne Hathaway portrayed in this film is actually not to my taste.

View more about Passengers reviews

Extended Reading

Passengers quotes

  • [first lines]

    Claire Summers: [talking on her phone in bed] Hello. Hello... Oh, hi. Hi... No, wide-awake. What's up?

  • Claire Summers: "The truth heals." Who said that?

    Perry: I don't know. Some dead, white guy.

    Claire Summers: No. You.

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