Ever since I saw the Tibetan Code, I have always believed that wolves are animals with high IQs. They are organized and deployed. This is also fully illustrated in this movie. Humans and wolves have launched a protracted battle. The first movie I watched Uncle Neeson was hurricane rescue, wonderful fights and rescues, and a perfect ending. I thought this would be a story about Uncle Neeson taking the survivors out of the wolves and finally being saved. After the plane crashed, two of the seven people who survived were bitten to death by wolves, one froze to death, one fell off a cliff, one gave up, and the last person beside him drowned. Watching teammates die, no matter how strong people are, they will feel Fear and loneliness, the male protagonist shouted to the sky with a hoarse voice, but he could not get any response from God, what should he do? Looking at the photos in everyone's wallet, one's life has ended, and one's family is incomplete. Uncle Nissen's eyes are so contagious, firm but sad, and finally found that he has strayed into the wolf's den and faced a group of eyeing tigers. The wolf, the man and the wolf king are about to start a one-on-one contest. Although the outcome is not clear, one can imagine how tragic the process is.
Classic lines include a poem written by Dad: "Once more into the fray. Into the last good fight I'll ever know. Live and die this day. Live and die this day." The
beloved woman's line "Don't be afraid ."
And the sentence "I think that's my destination" said to the snow mountain by the person who gave up on himself is a
very profound portrayal of the relief and despair of life. At the end, the wolf fell in a pool of blood and let out a heavy breathing sound. The ending of Uncle Nissen is left to our imagination. Maybe he is still alive and can walk out of this ice and snow. Imagine a good ending, so as to comfort the Six people died.
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