human thinking

Cary 2022-03-25 09:01:08

The first decryption type movie I watched, in general, the storyline was well arranged, and the story fragments were constantly interspersed and described, requiring the audience to connect the plot by themselves. Switching between third-party and first-person shots several times, but sometimes the added shake and blur are a bit too exaggerated and continuous. The plot twists and turns, from the rescued Professor Langdon in the hospital to the connection to Sienna and the millionaire who wants to turn the world into hell. All the people are hunting for Dr. Langdon and his code, and finally the true story of the story is revealed, and the good and bad characters are on both sides.

Part of the story of human nature begins to tell. The billionaire wants to reduce the world's population through the virus, intending to turn the world into the hell described by Dante, thinking that this can lead to early redemption. Sienna is his pursuer, intending to use biotechnology to destroy the world.

However, no one can be God and have no right to decide the life and death of others. Even a genius or a rich man cannot control the life and death of people in the world.

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Extended Reading
  • Clemens 2022-04-24 07:01:06

    Solving puzzles is becoming more and more paediatric, ripping off some religious and historical fur, and making it into a spy movie, waking up and losing memory, unable to distinguish between friends and foes, tourist resort scenery films. The two relationships between young and middle-aged people are both a little greasy and crooked, and the only bright spot is the heroine who is reversed. If it goes on like this, it's all a routine, Ron Howard wake up.

  • Taya 2022-04-24 07:01:06

    It's a pity that I was not happy to be contained! ! !

Inferno quotes

  • [first lines]

    Bertrand Zobrist: [on TV] It took the Earth's population 100,000 years to reach a billion people. And then just 100 more to reach two billion.

  • Robert Langdon: We met?

    Sienna Brooks: Sorry, that's not quite fair. I was 9 years old at the time.

    Robert Langdon: Wait, wait, 9, 9 years old?

    Sienna Brooks: I was crazy about puzzles. And I liked your books. Maybe not Lost Language of Ideograms. But the others.

    Robert Langdon: Okay.

    Sienna Brooks: I read them all.

    Robert Langdon: What a weird kid.

    Sienna Brooks: I was, actually.

    Robert Langdon: Did I say that out loud?

    Sienna Brooks: You did.