This movie evokes people's dreams of peekaboo when they were young, but it permeates a boundless atmosphere of horror. Speaking of horror, it is really horrible. There are even death mutations that can be spread among the crowd by light. In the end, this magic barrier can also control the captives, create auditory hallucinations, and set off a cloudy wind, which only makes people breathtaking and cold sweats. What is also unexpected is that the blind became natural survivors in this crisis and used schools for the blind to create a large shelter. Sister Sang took her two children and rode the "Noah's Ark". After untold hardships, the three of them finally arrived safely in their new home with the "dove crow". This makes people wonder whether the real world seen by the eyes is really vicious? Does it have to be filtered or even closed for introspection in order to change the mind and ensure the purity of the soul? What is it that makes story writers so unbearable to open their eyes? I think people should be awed and scrupulous, and the materialistic world is distorted and ugly. There is a difference between good and evil, and righteousness and profit are compared. I think that even when survival and interests are threatened, the pious belief, beautiful human nature and perseverance should not be lost. Come to think of it, this should be an open-ended religious movie!
View more about Bird Box reviews