I would like to dedicate this film to scientists who have dedicated themselves to the cause of superstition!

Jerald 2022-03-21 09:01:42

I would like to dedicate this film to scientists who have dedicated themselves to the cause of superstition!
MD, I didn't want to swear, but I was forced to. There are three reasons: 1. This is not a pure sci-fi film, which disappoints me; 2. This is a disgusting horror film, and some of the plots frighten me; 3. I don’t understand the ending, and I feel that the screenwriter and director I wanted to play something advanced, but I didn't even understand it myself.
The first half of the explanation about space-folding wormhole travel seems to have a bit of scientific meaning, but then the more I watched it, the more it looked like a ghost movie, so I became more and more uncomfortable. It seems interesting to see some buddies explain the life forms in the spacecraft with standing waves, but I am very dissatisfied with the situation that the doctor was thrown into space and reappeared. This is definitely a ghost movie, and there is no theory to explain it.
So I can only say that please dedicate this film to scientists who dedicate themselves to the cause of superstition!

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Extended Reading
  • Ocie 2022-04-23 07:01:44

    Childhood Memory. . It looks like all kinds of pseudoscience now xsk

  • Earnest 2022-03-23 09:01:42

    The Doctor's transformation is puzzling, and his wife's line feels like a Solaris copy. The ghost ship spokesperson who appeared at the end is also a bug in the play. Sam Neill feels completely useless in this movie

Event Horizon quotes

  • Dr. Weir: You can't leave. She won't let you.

  • D.J.: I wasn't going to tell you this. I've been listening to the distress signal, and I, um, think I made a mistake in the translation.

    [Plays the distress signal]

    Miller: Go on.

    D.J.: I thought it said "liberate me" - "save me." But it's not "me." It's "liberate tutemet" - "save yourself." And it gets worse.

    [Plays the distress signal again]

    D.J.: There - I think that says "ex inferis." "Save yourself... from Hell." Look, if what Doctor Weir tells us is true, this ship has been beyond the boundaries of our universe, of known scientific reality. Who knows where it's been, what it's seen... or what it's brought back with it?

    Miller: From Hell? You don't believe in that kind of stuff, do you?

    D.J.: Whoever sent that message, he sure believed in Hell.