I still remember learning a word in high school, glimpse, which means a glance, and I heard that word a few times in this movie as well, and I thought it would be nice to have a glimpse of tomorrow if I subtitled the movie. Because, that's how the movie is narrated in a short, brief, picture of tomorrow, introduced by the little boy Walker, cast into Tomorrowland because of a shapeless jetpack, and then a long story of the girl Cathy's big adventure, controlled by a mobile phone I thought I just wanted to take a close look at the launch, but I cut a few lines and rolled out the same way. The content that is slightly cut into the theme is not revealed until the badge appears, and the next is an extended version of the previous trailer, a society with advanced technology in various senses. The filming of this episode is quite wonderful, and following the heroine's perspective has an intuitive understanding of the future (although why I didn't bump into anything when I went up and down the stairs and got on the train, it can only be said that Cathy is dying). It’s a pity that badges, like all our external devices today, consume a lot of power and run out of power within a few minutes, and the future that everyone is looking forward to, the ideas about the future in the movie have been largely exhausted by now (the funds are gone. Right), the cliché of being chased, fleeing by car, fleeing by shuttle, and even escaping with a rocket, the Eiffel Tower section is not bad, but it’s also a clichéd escape. In the future, the bad guys will appear, as always, in a declining society, the protagonist is imprisoned, and then inspiration bursts, fights, kills the villain and blows up the bane, and it's over. A feeling that it was over before I even entered the play, I almost didn't hold back my internal injuries. Dare you really hide all the wonderful scenes in the trailer, the futuristic sense of the good is also wonderful in the advertisement of the badge. After all, it was carefully prepared for everyone to see, but you can see that it was decades ago. It's a little thing that hasn't changed after a few decades, the speeding car is still the speeding car (and the part where the train in the future appears is rather fake), what you eat has a chocolate flavor, aren't you geniuses? Decades of making chocolate flavored? The more eye-catching (and the trailer basically has no spoilers) is the robot girl. Although her face is full of freckles, she is still a bit cute. The only thing she can't bear is the special effects related to her, the part of her running and chasing the car and the final damage The mistake made me feel like a domestic sci-fi film (yes, it's a robot man), this part is really unpopular, but the little girl's expressiveness is good, she just keeps her mouth shut and pretends to be pure, like It's not a smile, it has to show a machine appearance. By the way, what kind of robot chaser is really drunk. As for the final battle, there is not much bright spot, the robot does not look very real, and the heroine just started a bomb that was useless in the end (it is estimated that an island in the southern country was blown up) , by the way, the unexplained countdown timer is clearly the world line change meter that ran out of "Stone Gate". Therefore, the plot is weak and the special effects are mediocre, so we don’t care about the rationality of the plot, such as how the rocket can travel freely through dimensions, why the future world seems to be stagnant (obviously two irrelevant places), etc. . The center of the film is nothing more than the hope that the heroine and her father talked about. Hope is also a consistent style of Disney. In the end, everyone picked up the badge that symbolized hope and stood in the wheat field and looked at the future high in the distance. Tower, quite a poetic ending. Naturally, relatively speaking, this movie in a sci-fi coat can’t hide Disney’s strong fairy tale texture, beliefs and choices, hope and courage are stories for children after all, but I think if I were a few years younger, maybe I would I was moved by this film. After all, it was still an era of looking for hope, and I believed that everything would happen. Therefore, when young Walker answered the question that the flying backpack that couldn't fly had an egg, he said: "I wear Flying over the city with a jetpack, the child sees it and believes that anything is possible." So this is a story that children love to hear, even though all they see is the trail that flew over their heads, except for miracles. The hope is only a fleeting glimpse of tomorrow. The center of the film is nothing more than the hope that the heroine and her father talked about. Hope is also a consistent style of Disney. In the end, everyone picked up the badge that symbolized hope and stood in the wheat field and looked at the future high in the distance. Tower, quite a poetic ending. Naturally, relatively speaking, this movie in a sci-fi coat can’t hide Disney’s strong fairy tale texture, beliefs and choices, hope and courage are stories for children after all, but I think if I were a few years younger, maybe I would I was moved by this film. After all, it was still an era of looking for hope, and I believed that everything would happen. Therefore, when young Walker answered the question that the flying backpack that couldn't fly had an egg, he said: "I wear Flying over the city with a jetpack, the child sees it and believes that anything is possible." So this is a story that children love to hear, even though all they see is the trail that flew over their heads, except for miracles. The hope is only a fleeting glimpse of tomorrow. The center of the film is nothing more than the hope that the heroine and her father talked about. Hope is also a consistent style of Disney. In the end, everyone picked up the badge that symbolized hope and stood in the wheat field and looked at the future high in the distance. Tower, quite a poetic ending. Naturally, relatively speaking, this movie in a sci-fi coat can’t hide Disney’s strong fairy tale texture after all, belief and choice, hope and courage are stories for children after all, but I think if I were a few years younger, maybe I would I was moved by this film. After all, it was still an era of looking for hope, and I believed that everything would happen. Therefore, when young Walker answered the question that the flying backpack that couldn't fly had an egg, he said: "I wear Flying over the city with a jetpack, the child sees it and believes that anything is possible." So this is a story that children love to hear, even though all they see is the trail that flew over their heads, except for miracles. The hope is only a fleeting glimpse of tomorrow.
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