The preciousness of life and the beauty of home

Summer 2022-03-19 09:01:02

Watching this movie, there are no big tears or sensational feelings, but I can feel the American dream, the love of space and the cherishing of human life all the time. The time to watch this movie coincided with the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines, and the black box of the 1999 China Southern Airlines plane crash was uploaded on Weibo. After listening to it, my deskmate called me and said that the recording of that kind of person in despair shocked him.
Life is so fragile, you don't want to die, but you can't help yourself.
Those uneasy lives, how can they still think about it.

Far away from the earth, there is no support in space, when the chance of returning home is lost, James looks at the moon that he has been thinking about for a long time, but covers it with his thumb, and after slowly removing it, he sees the aqua blue in front of him. planet.
I want to go home.
He said.
We pursue space, land on the moon, and explore Mars, but what we cannot do without, and ultimately for, is this blue planet.
It is only when you leave that you realize its beauty. Despair, only to know that life is expensive.

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Extended Reading
  • Libby 2021-10-20 19:02:50

    I just watched it with Hanks...

  • Eveline 2022-03-22 09:01:14

    A film adapted from real events, the difficulties encountered by the astronauts are intertwined, and the ending is as happy as all the blockbusters. An excellent promotional film for the image of the United States. The exploration of the universe is a test of human courage and wisdom.

Apollo 13 quotes

  • John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: Power is everything.

    Gene Kranz: What do you mean?

    John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: Without it, they don't talk to us, they don't correct their trajectory, they don't turn the heat shield around. We gotta turn everything off, now. They're not gonna make it to re-entry.

    Gene Kranz: What do you mean "everything"?

    John Aaron, EECOM Arthur: With everything on, the LEM draws 60 amps. At that rate, in 16 hours, the batteries are dead, not 45. And so is the crew. We gotta get them down to twelve amps.

  • Jim Lovell: Okay, uh, good evening, America, and welcome aboard Apollo 13. I'm Jim Lovell, and we're broadcasting to you tonight from an altitude of almost 200,000 miles away from the... the face of the Earth, and we have a pretty good show in store for you tonight. We are going to show you just what, uh, life is like for the three of us in the vast expanse of outer space.

    [a controller at Houston glances at a TV and sees a baseball game is on instead]

    Jim Lovell: Okay, one of the first things we'd like to do is provide you with the appropriate background music. So, uh, hit it there, Freddo.

    Fred Haise: [playing Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky"] Hello, world!

    Jim Lovell: That, uh, was supposed to be the theme to "2001", in honor of our command module Odyssey, but there seems to have been a last-minute change in the program.