Seeing your comments made me confused, and rarely write film reviews, this time I really can't bear it.
This movie is about one story line in the whole incident. There are two story lines about water, one is drainage, and the other is to block groundwater. I have been waiting for this storyline for nearly ten years, and now I finally see it.
Regarding the three-in-three-out issue, please don't talk about the protagonist halo. You really have watched too many movies. Do you really think it is a success? Do you know how complicated the structure of a nuclear power plant is? Don’t go so far, let’s talk about the details that I think are better in the film. For the first time, an explosion occurred on the second day of the protagonist’s resignation. It was very natural in the film to drive to the nuclear power plant and bump into the birds on the road (after a nuclear explosion, the radiation above the ground was dozens of times that of the ground, and the birds were the first to be affected). . The second time, the conversation with the lieutenant colonel was a lingering fear. After seeing his son's condition, he was more certain to go, just to get his son better treatment. For the third time, it happened on the TV to celebrate Labor Day, (these are real materials), cheering along the main road of Kip, and Kip is only 100 kilometers away from Pripyat (the location of the nuclear power plant). The male lead who has been there twice knows that this distance is not safe, and he must go back. According to the information I have, these two survived very well in the end, the only thing that has been adapted. Another point is that nuclear explosions occur in the air, so the radiation in the water is smaller. If the nuclear leaks in the water, the radiation in the air is smaller. But no one knew about this at the time. The most they knew was that the closer the distance, the greater the harm. Finally, I have to repeat it. This is just one of the story lines. How can the whole incident be explained to you in more than two hours? Those who want to know the information can choose to watch the 2015 Nobel Prize in "Chernobyl Sorrow" instead of complaining here.
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