1. Neither of the two crashed planes had any working communication equipment?
2. The part of pulling the heroine up the steep slope feels like the hero has completely changed from a survival expert to a rookie. With so many ready-made tools, it has completely turned into a brainless show, and there is no need to do it completely by brute force;
3. In the last scene, I clearly saw the rescuers get off the helicopter. They had to go down the slope and push the heroine up the top of the slope before thinking about sending a distress signal. It is completely illogical to take off your pants and fart. It takes at least ten minutes for a normal person to walk down from the top of the slope and then push the heroine up, not to mention a man with a leg injury and lack of physical strength. If he did this in reality, the rescue plane would have flown away long ago. Both of them were dead, and the IQ of the male protagonist was completely hurt by the director's flaw by 10,000 points.
4. The appearance of rescue helicopters is also illogical. In such bad weather, most of the rescue activities will directly terminate the return flight when the weather turns bad. After all, helicopters cannot be guaranteed by themselves. If there are people in distress, I think from the experience of pilots, they will not risk the risk of crashing to forcibly land. It is better to drop some rescue supplies to make punctuation and return safely, and organize the rescue again.
If the logic is handled a little better, this movie is still worth recommending.
View more about Arctic reviews