Science fiction movies have a certain novelty. When the earth is no longer suitable for survival, humans begin interstellar migration. On a habitable planet, there is a virus. After being infected, people's thoughts and thoughts will be known to outsiders. However, only men will show this symptom, and women will not be affected.
In the film, the women in the two settlements suffered completely different fates: in one place, the women were thought to be the selective expression of the virus as an unfair expression of fate, and the men slaughtered them to the end, while in the other, the women turned their backs on their own and took their homes. Well organized. For these immigrants, there is no choice if they are infected with the virus, but they can choose to accept their fate and continue to live, or to pour their anger on others. Different responses lead to different endings, which are very insinuations to the current situation.
However, there is a logical flaw at the end of the film. The hostess issued a distress signal, and the mothership descended directly without verifying what was happening below. Although the virus is not fatal, it did not consider the feelings of the people on the mothership. At least for them, they can still choose whether to refuse to contract the virus and continue to drift on the interstellar; or to start a new life without fear of the virus. Or is it that after many years of interstellar voyages, democracy no longer exists, and only dictatorship can manage the entire ship?
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