Produced by Ridley's studio and produced by Ridley himself, the whole movie is more like an extra-teran of the alien universe.
The Phoenix Lightspot incident itself is one of the most concerned cases among UFO enthusiasts. Witnesses from neighboring states to the mighty UFO army, and then staying over Phoenix in the evening, there are numerous witness reports. For example, the civilian governors of the airport military have all acknowledged the incident. Its authenticity is definitely the first existence in UFO incidents. Just looking at the plethora of video interviews can make people creepy.
What Ridley did was to graft the setting of the Prometheus Engineer Creator to the setting of this movie. It echoes Prometheus with native murals and the wheel of Ezekiel mentioned in the Bible.
For a passerby fan of Mr. Ridley,
What moved me the most was not the setting of the grafting engineer creator, nor the alien universe promised by Ridley.
It is the three young protagonists who are missing in the film. They are obsessed with the vision in the sky, looking for the answer, which is simply a copy of Dr. Xiao.
The parents of the missing teenager recalled them almost weepingly, saying that no one cared about the vision in the sky. Everyone had forgotten it. Only they were obsessed with it and wanted to pursue the truth, but gave up their short life.
Three unfamiliar teenagers, because of the doubts in their hearts, met and met each other.
I still remember the first time Ashley met Josh and asked to interview her for more content, expressing her understanding of the incident, mentioning the Wheel of Ezekiel, and implying her creator's point of view.
When Josh saw Ashley for the last time, Ashley had an illusion of treating the alien as his father, calling "father" and rushing to the wheel of Ezekiel, seeing the "Ezekiel vision" mentioned in the Bible, and finally Disappearing into the dark night, time and space are pinched, the camera travels through time, and it happens to be obtained by sister Josh who also pursues the truth.
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