double the fear

Therese 2022-03-16 09:01:04

How old are you?
If you were born after the 70s, this movie is still a real horror movie.
If you are born after 80, this film is not as enjoyable as the horror of Godzilla.

In those days of two super-imperialist rivalries, each other's nuclear arsenals could destroy the world hundreds of times.
After the Japanese nuclear explosion in the late World War II, everyone was not only glad that this super weapon brought world peace earlier, but also was shocked by the tragic situation in Japan after the nuclear explosion, and had a real understanding of the super weapon of nuclear explosion.
Until now, people have lived in nuclear fear.

Nuclear fear has been a staple of every film and television production since World War II, with the only change being that after the decline of a nuclear power, the threat has gone from nuclear explosions to stealth nuclear radiation.

This movie is based on the classic movie in 1977. In that era, the nuclear threat was the most prevalent. As long as the thought of nuclear explosion, people's first reaction is the end of the world and the human mutant after being irradiated, and the two superpowers There are endless nuclear tests going on.

It is against this background that the film emerged.

Is it to see the heartbeat from Godzilla, or the vomiting from nuclear radiation.
Only people who have seen it with their own eyes can comment.
The only thing to say is that those mutants due to nuclear radiation are real.
This film combines people's fear of nuclear radiation with the harm to ordinary people by those who are irradiated.
Fear doubled.

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Extended Reading

The Hills Have Eyes quotes

  • Lizard: [to Pluto, referring to Brenda] You gotta be a man to do that.

  • Lynn: Hey B.

    Brenda Carter: Hey.

    Lynn: How you holding up?

    Brenda Carter: [sarcastically] I am thrilled.

    Lynn: [laughing] Yeah, this is a total drag.

    Brenda Carter: [snidely] Yeah, well, you know, I really don't care what they say. Next year, I am going to Cancun with my friends. Not going on any more of their lame family trips.

    Lynn: Well, we're not not gonna have many more of them, you know. And if you want to go to Cancun, you know you're gonna have to get a job.

    Brenda Carter: Oh, what you mean like your job?

    Lynn: [firmly] Brenda. I help Doug out at the store, okay?

    Brenda Carter: [leaning back in her chair, disbelieving] Ah.

    Doug Bukowski: [off-camera] Honey? Can you bring me my jacket?

    Brenda Carter: [mimicking Lynn] I'll be right there, honey.

    Lynn: [gets up and walks away, smirking and flipping Brenda the middle finger]

    Brenda Carter: [laughs]