From the production point of view, Caesar’s eyes, the storytelling of the script, and the motion capture technology in the first film all feel amazing. In the second part, the surprise in Caesar's eyes disappeared. Maybe it was numb. Maybe it was because I knew that these were made with dynamic motion capture technology. Without the initial curiosity, it might be a different scene. The whole script can basically guess the general storyline from reading the trailer. Later, it is just a respect for the first part and confirmation of my guess, nothing more. The dynamic motion capture of the second part and the large-scale orangutan's movements in the wooded buildings are still commendable. The second part that may make people feel warmer is the place where the little orangutan plays near the female doctor and the male orangutan feels cute.
Logically speaking, this has the same effect as the shredder. Humans have created viruses themselves, but humans cannot control viruses; humans cannot control diseases; at the same time, humans will not isolate viruses (the Holy See began to purify and isolate infectious diseases in the Middle Ages); humans are even decent because of viruses. Armed forces are gone, and human armored weapons are also gone; humans have interrupted their existing communications due to viruses, and then have to get in touch with the outside world through wireless devices. How can you interrupt the original communications; video As long as the human beings are responsible for gathering together, then do nothing or ask questions. When I saw that the people in it were all crowded in the aisle, I wanted to ask you if you weren’t crowded, don’t you have to eat? Seeing here I can only fast forward helplessly, because I am also responsible for my IQ.
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