This allegorical genre pops up every few years at the Cannes Film Festival, and it tends to be a bit more thought-provoking than the Hollywood disaster/thriller we usually see. This debut film from a Brazilian director shares the same creative concept and expressive ambition as "Everything's Lost" a few years ago, and even the protagonist uses the same actor with superb acting skills. Cannes actor Max Mikkelsen, who survives in the ice and snow, and Robert Redford, who fights at sea, are equally memorable, but this film breaks the usual design of male one-man shows and accidentally introduces a female character. Although she has almost no lines in the whole process, she invisibly adds a complex perspective to expressing human nature in adversity to the theme of PUBG Mobile. However, this film is less suspenseful and thrilling than "Everything is Lost". The environment the actor faces is not as cruel as he imagined, and the plot of eating and drinking is surprising. The daily records of the polar expedition team did not gradually highlight the director's creative intention until the second half of the paragraph dragging the heroine's expedition. On the whole, the allegorical flavor of the film is not prominent enough, some unreasonable dramatic plots make people laugh, and the beautiful photography makes the film have a tendency to become a polar scenery tourism promotional film.
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