The plot can be finished in a few sentences: In the post-apocalyptic world, the hero who once served as an astronaut participated in the space agency's plan, and wanted to find other livable planets for his own children. He conveyed the technology to his daughter, and it was not him who saved mankind, but the child who inherited him.
It is such a story, if you want to say it is novel, it is probably not-it does not need such evaluation.
There are many other things to say, such as the discussion about wormholes and black holes, such as the imagination of high-dimensional space-but those who have more obvious research preferences can discuss it.
Anyway, I don't bother to think about the setting, let alone find faults. Because science fiction or gods and monsters are just carriers, the most important thing is still the subject that I want to describe. I believe this is still a wonderful work ten years later: the concept can be broken through, the technology can be innovated, and the exquisite pictures will be washed out by the continuous improvement techniques and become awkward. Only sincerity can continue.
It is rare to see movies with such sincere expressions. In today's movie market, which is generally full of eyeballs, topics, exquisite CG scenes and bluntly embedded advertisements, such serious and serious communication itself can be praised. The director may not like this kind of evaluation, but in my eyes, he is indeed a conscientious old farmer-this is a compliment.
It's hard to believe that this is a movie that Nolan has often been evaluated as "cold-blooded", but he showed enough sincerity.
This is a self-breakthrough of a veteran director, but his posture does not want to prove anything deliberately. Like a chef who has already practiced his basic skills to return to the basics, he still serves a home-cooked dish after retreat. There is no need for abrupt innovation and change, just because Huo Hou has become a realm.
There are no heroes in the film either, although people are often reminded that this is a "for all mankind" plan, the protagonist is still just a father after passing through the entire galaxy. Set out to save their children, and return to return to their children. The whole world is safely locked in a little girl's study, but it feels like it should be, and it is natural.
There are so many things to watch in this film, and maybe every time you watch it, you will have a new understanding, such as those scientists who are brave, cowardly, deceiving, pioneering...the expression of human nature is also vivid. And what I see right now is:
The end is coming, the end of the road, the catastrophe.
Love is the only thing left to cut off disasters, inherit dreams, tolerate everything and open up everything.
Time cannot be obliterated, space cannot be blocked, black holes cannot be swallowed, and stars in the universe cannot be obliterated.
Love is a human being as tiny as an ant, the only force that can contend with these behemoths.
What a cliché.
I love to listen.
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