part where people float up, show it to any junior high school student, to seniors Most primary school seniors see it and know within 1 second that this is of course "increased by weight" (use weight instead of mass, which is in line with the cognition of primary school students), and the moon that is close to it is "sucked up". I asked the head of the National Security Agency and the general who used to be in charge of NASA to ask what was going on, and after a few words, the male lead answered (what is the term "gravity imbalance", those two senior officials even forgot about gravity, Do you still use such big words? Are you deliberately playing with them, male protagonist?), and then the two senior officials still did not believe it, and they also took ten or twenty minutes to talk about "the mass of the moon has become two I'll explain it again... I'll go, the male protagonist should have said "I was sucked up by the moon!", if those two idiot senior officials wanted to ask, they would each give ten slaps, and then said: "Why did you two idiots go half an hour before this film!? Believe it or not, I'll let you take the lunch now?!"
Bai Blind is such a crazy (can be called a masterpiece) hard sci-fi setting!
The director is not taking care of the audience's enjoyment of the movie at all (the movie cannot be made as obscure as a textbook, the background knowledge that should be fully explained must be fully explained, we will never be demanding), this director is simply treating the audience as Silly 13! He didn't even bother to deal with the details related to the natural sciences at all, it's just that shit luck met a good consultant or screenwriter to help him come up with this god-like hardcore setting - here is another version of this. a piece of evidence.
In the meteor shower at the beginning of the film, whether it is a meteorite blasting high in the sky or hitting the ground at a distance, the sound and light are always synchronized - my God, the director has never seen a thunderstorm, right? First lightning and then thunder don't you know? Elementary school students know it! In contrast, the sound effect of a mammoth screaming like a bed when a huge meteor swept through the camera is tolerable, just treat it as the background music, but the detail of the sound and light synchronization is unbearable - of course, I can't bear it, I still bear it. Yes, but this slot can't help but spit.
View more about Impact reviews