As a souvenir

Kasey 2022-01-16 08:01:29

This is Paul Walker’s last movie in his lifetime.
The film takes a real Hurricane Katrina as the background, telling the fact that the first-time father accepted his wife's death on the operating table, the birth of his daughter, the hurricane, congenital illness, unattended and so on. Cruel, but I have to face it. It was a painful thing to load his wife from the cold ground into the body bag. Turning to look at the child in the incubator, he was left in the hospital by the doctor before his eyes opened. Natural disasters, man-made disasters, and people who lost their conscience in the face of death began to rob, kill, and plunder. Even when there is rescue, everyone will scramble to occupy this sporadic resource. This is human nature. Although the explanation is a bit sad. Paul kept talking with his daughter, shaking the generator, constantly showing the happy time with his wife, and constantly saving himself and resisting fate. It's really hard not to be moved. This is also human nature.
Beauty, evil, good and evil, what should be said, has been said. No one suspects that the logic inside is too naive. In that kind of scene, Paul's father is real and powerful, and it also frees me from his impression of racing. Just a good start, but just gone.

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Extended Reading
  • Joelle 2022-03-26 09:01:11

    It's a true legacy of Paul Walker. . .

  • Major 2022-03-26 09:01:11

    I happened to see the news that Paul died, and I saw him in the movie at night. In fact, with the development of the story, I hope that Paul will be rescued, not only in the film but also in real life. At the end, I was wondering whether to turn off the broadcast Will Paul reappear in front of everyone again? He really hasn't gone far.

Hours quotes

  • Abigail Hayes: You're so stubborn. I love that about you.

  • [last lines]

    Nolan: [hugging crying baby] I know you.