In the process of watching, I feel that it is not only science fiction, but also the author's mockery of the racial discrimination system. Use regression theory to satirize human greed, desire, evil, etc...
At the beginning of the film, after a long space travel (about 2000), several protagonists landed on a place that seemed to be a new planet, but they did not know this strange The planet is actually very familiar to them. After they escaped from the crashed spaceship, they encountered apes that humans thought were lower primates, and that these apes were still killing humans. One of the three crew members was killed, one was turned into an idiot, and only the protagonist Taylor wanted to prove himself. Prove your identity. The latter is like the Pope against Galileo's heliocentric theory. The Boss in it does not admit what Taylor said, even if the Boss knows that these are actually true. In the end, Taylor relied on his own strength to confirm his point of view. Boss also let Taylor go. In the end, the scene that Taylor encountered was perhaps the most exciting scene in the whole world. Taylor saw the Statue of Liberty.
There are two passages in this movie that touched me the most. One is a sentence from their so-called Bible that Boss asked to read: "Beware the beast man, for he is the devil s pawn. Alone among God's primate, he kills for sport or lust or greed.”. The other is the moment when the protagonist Taylor saw the Statue of Liberty, although he did not explain everything. But it can probably be guessed that this planet he thinks is in a strange galaxy turned out to be the earth 2000 years ago, ironic, ironic.
Although this movie is a bit outrageous, it is true that human beings sometimes kill, set fire, and plunder for their own interests, rights, and desires.
Overall, this movie is really good and worth recommending.
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