For people about my age, the ways to get in touch with Japan are about the following, from Sony to learn about its high-tech, from comics to learn about its imagination, from AV to learn about its BT... However, this The second "Vick Hill" can make you feel certain characteristics of the Japanese at one time, that is, the organized extreme.
We often say that people are rational in most situations. Even extremes are a case of a small number of people. If a certain nation or country collectively falls into an extreme state, what kind of situation will it be? This film tells you that in order to insist on their extremes, the Japanese even use their high technology to isolate themselves from the outside world-the kind of complete isolation. No fly can fly into Japan, even spy satellites. Nor can it penetrate that magical interference wave. We often use the idiom behind closed doors to ridicule others, but Japan behind closed doors has created a miracle-a biometal man (through a certain technology to mechanize all cellular metals in the body), and attempts to control the world through this technology.
The picture style of the movie is very similar to the famous "Apple Nuclear War" a few years ago, the same 3D rendering technology, but more overexposed light is used, and the hair and fabrics are not as good as "Beowulf". Pursue the ultimate, but this does not affect the beauty. The processing of machinery, especially metal, requires a lot of care, especially the emergence of metal snakes, where tens of thousands of metal scraps reflect a lot of light from different angles in the sun.
For many narrow-minded nationalists like me, the greatest joy of the movie may lie in the ending. The whole of Japan is turned into a wasteland and all Japanese people die. More importantly, these are all done by the Japanese themselves.
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