As above, the title is my biggest evaluation of this drama. Watching sci-fi movies and TV series must be studied in combination with the historical phenomena that have existed in the development of real human beings, because the settings of many sci-fi works seem to be very sci-fi, and it seems that it will not happen in the future, but in fact many internal settings are historical What happened, just changed the shell of science fiction. For example, the settings of Dune, Base, Hyperion, Three-Body Problem, Alien Mistake, Time Spin, 1984, etc., all seem to be born out of the civilization structure that has appeared in human history or the game between great powers in the real world. relation.
First, the show didn't begin its sci-fi journey until the end of episode 5. A lot of people rush to comment halfway through watching this is not good that is not good, I can only say that you are too tender, if you are put in this drama, you will be excluded if you don’t even finish two episodes Out of NASA, even if you're just a sweeper, you're not immune. If you want to understand this show, you have to understand the real-world behavior of the big powers during the Cold War from the alliance of NATO to the disintegration of the Soviet Union. You must know that many political jokes have been handed down from that time. It was an era in which the laws of scientific development of things could be ignored for the sake of being politically correct. The real era was when we lied and deceived, from top to bottom, from bottom to top, because as the show said, if the United States could not be in the aerospace field Beyond the Soviet Union, then a United States that has lost its honor and self-confidence will fall into turmoil, division, and demise. The result is that this is true in the real world, but in turn it becomes the Soviet Union's own misery. This is the most sci-fi world view setting. .
Secondly, aside from the sci-fi setting that the Soviet Union took the lead in landing on the moon in the United States in Episode 1, other sci-fi settings mirror the real world. For those who haven't even watched the next 5 episodes, don't comment, because this drama can be said to be paving the way for the next 5 episodes until the end of the 5th episode, and the narrative skills are so steady and steady. . My favorite episode is the episode 5 Margo relied on the "political chips" in his hands to adapt to the space agency after a "silly white sweet" researcher who was keen on astrophysical calculations was too pragmatic and missed the position of flight director. The director's "political game" to safeguard his "legitimate rights and interests" is simply addicting. In addition, there is another setting that Nixon's White House commissioner insists that the Soviet Union is ahead of the United States in every step in the aerospace field. It is preparing to establish a missile base on the moon to threaten the national security of the United States. I wonder if anyone has found that the real-world picture of deja vu is Cuban missiles. crisis.
Finally, the male protagonist who is in the first-tier astronaut sequence of NASA is actually a good person, and his three views are very positive. He has been unhappy until his comeback in the last 5 episodes. It was because of the practical needs of the NASA that he was reinstated and put in command. From here, a male protagonist who was originally practical and lacked political savvy began to have a simple " Political consciousness", it is also wonderful that the black-bellied male protagonist who quickly learned the skills of political games in the crisis after landing on the moon has completed the setting of political transformation. Anyway, this show is okay, a bit of the Manhattan Project. In short, scientific workers who can't do political work generally don't last long, ancient and modern, all over the world, and so on.
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