Interesting at the end

Camden 2022-08-11 21:49:20

The plot is roughly that a medical team goes to the hardest-hit area to develop an antidote. The 18th is the government's ultimatum, and all infected people will be wiped out after the expiration date. When the 18th was approaching, the medical team developed an antidote, but one side effect was amnesia. The vehicle that was transporting the antidote did not take the antidote out because of a car accident, and all members of the medical team accidentally got infected, and they all lost their memory after taking the medicine. The whole movie is their process of retrieving memories.

Although it is a story about amnesia, the pace is really slow, and there is no decent climax in each scene, which makes the whole film look flat.

In the final ending, the two heroes and heroines were infected again, and the two were injected with the antidote again. Before the heroine died, he wrote the memories he remembered on paper and gave it to the hero. After the hero woke up, he stepped on the paper under his feet. In other words, the ending opens a new cycle of the male protagonist's search for memory.

What I want to complain about is that if you really want to lose your memory, put the memory on the paper and put it in your pants pocket. Throw it on your body and it will be over?

In contrast, Jason Byrne directly put the certification information under his skin, and he couldn't lose it even if he wanted to—professionals are different.

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Extended Reading

Open Grave quotes

  • Michael: The others are all smart, but I'm... I'm here to *do* something.

  • Michael: Why won't anyone listen to me?

    Sharon: Because of what you did!