At 39 minutes, I was very unkind to think of Temple Run. . . After 47 minutes, I was very curious about how the oxygen absorber would break when placed in the package, and the metal package was not deformed under pressure. Since alien monsters rely on the adrenaline breath secreted by humans to identify the direction of human beings, but the monster itself has no vision, why not design a combat suit like an aviation suit to wrap the soldier's whole body, or the adrenaline breath will spread into the air go with. Or go straight to the point, mass-produce that adrenaline analog, and spray it in the air to completely disorient the monster during battle. Anyway, the setting of "monsters have almost no eyesight" is really strange, even if they rely on cobra-like infrared to sense humans, it is much more reliable than "horror adenoids". And didn't his father launch a lot of small detective drones from the wreckage of the spacecraft? Why not set the drones to be at a certain distance from his son and rotate in a circle with the son as the center. The distance can be determined according to the flying speed of the drone , but make sure that all drones add up to zero dead ends, so that monsters can be prevented from sneaking. The sudden father and son sensation in 57 minutes is very abrupt. In 64 minutes, the contactor on the son's arm was caught by the eagle, and the father and son lost contact. In fact, a drone should have been sent to follow the son to prevent such an accident from happening. In 67 minutes, my son went to the river and tied dead wood with vines to make a simple boat. I felt that such a time-consuming and laborious work was summed up by the director in one shot, which was really casual. In 84 minutes, the monster Nima hid most of the movie, and it surprised me when it came out. The movie is over. Although the plot of the battle between the son and the monster at the end is more intense and exciting, it is only five minutes. The whole movie is 100 minutes long, and it is a bit of a wait until these five minutes. . . The description of the father-son relationship is also far-fetched. Did the father only accept his son because he was a real soldier? Would it be a little too utilitarian? The title of the movie "Return to Earth" is very domineering and makes people imagine, but it turned out to be just a little bedtime story written by the father to his son, the content is how the son grows up and survives in the wilderness in the virgin forest. . . Since it's not a sci-fi-based movie, why don't you just show "Survival in the Wild" and "Future Earth"? After all, human beings have been away from the earth for so long, and the earth should have undergone major changes. Although it is not required to be as imaginative as Avatar, the plants in this movie are no different from the virgin forests now. The only change is that the weather is cold. Get up the leaves. . . The animals are even more speechless. First of all, a group of baboons chased their sons. After all, the baboons are primates that have evolved over the years and have not changed at all? Then there is the "eagle" that just got bigger and looks like a dog The cat, the bouncing snake in the hole, the hyena detected by the detector, and the poisonous leech that bit his son, there are only these five new animals! ! There's a lot of room for a movie on this subject, but it's so empty and unsurprising. In the end, the son defeated the monster, and it was too direct. Without being polite at all, the father of the son was rescued. The father gave the son a thumbs up and then TMD HAPPYEND! Luckily I didn't go to the cinema or my wallet would be mad at me.
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After Earth reviews