Write a bit urgent

Paris 2021-11-15 08:01:26

In the 1995 movies, Hollywood routines are still so obvious, but the acting skills such as Morgan Freeman, Kevin Spies and others made the protagonist's halo less dazzling. I have to say that it is used well, and it has improved a lot and weakened it. The protagonist's halo makes this movie very palatable now.
First of all, this movie does not involve the discussion about whether to save two thousand people or one person. The virus in the movie is artificially synthesized and used as a biochemical weapon. The synthesized basic virus should have been originally carried by the monkey host, and the airborne transmission was removed after manual research. The reason for the large-scale infection in Africa and a small town in the United States was because of a leak. The leak was that the monkey host with two virus antibodies was mistakenly let go, and after the general's cover, it broke out on a large scale.
Secondly, the image of the male protagonist, with a wife, a dog, a house, and a job, is a typical example of a happy American, except for his wife who wants to divorce and make trouble. Colleagues must be better than relatives, and opponents are 0. The boss is actually hidden by the superior. In American movies, the opponent is not bad. If the opponent is bad, it can't be really bad. It must be a harmless superior. There is no logical problem in the plot, which is the part of the plane fight behind. The lines are too procrastinated. One sentence can clearly explain the matter. From the perspective of ordinary people, don't even think about this scene. Not to mention the incoherent talk when I visited, but who is the male lead, the male lead, doctors, military doctors, soldiers, it took a long time to mention biochemical weapons and conspiracy when talking to the plane. After all, separation is the best time to use at this time. Of

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Extended Reading
  • Fay 2021-11-15 08:01:26

    In a group of big coffee, the monkey has become a well-deserved actor, whether it is the charming looking back and smiling, the affectionate gazing through the window, the anger after being betrayed, they are all explained too well! No wonder the movie poster puts the monkey in the middle...

  • Lesley 2022-04-21 09:01:47

    I have watched a lot of doomsday disaster movies from last year to now. Human beings are very strong and fragile, and if they are not careful, they will be at risk of being wiped out. Not only are there various unknown or mutated viruses in nature, but there are also viruses in the laboratory that are used for research but are extremely dangerous when they spread. This film is about the Ebola epidemic, which has an almost 100% fatality rate and is extremely contagious. There has indeed been an Ebola epidemic in the United States (the book and drama "Blood Epidemic" of the same name are about this), but thanks to a subtype that is not highly lethal to humans, a major infection in the United States has been avoided. The film has made a moral foreshadowing from the beginning, in order to curb the virus infection, indiscriminately blast the epidemic area. In the end, of course, a triumph of science and humanity. In reality, we all understand that if the track has reached the critical point of choosing to kill one person or five people, most people will choose to kill one person without hesitation. At the tipping point, this is not a moral dilemma to explore, and only by avoiding reaching that tipping point can humanity have a better hope.

Outbreak quotes

  • General Donald McClintock: Colonel Briggs.

    Colonel Briggs: Yes, sir.

    General Donald McClintock: Daniels was here? And here?

    Colonel Briggs: Yes, he was down here.

    General Donald McClintock: Why was I not informed?

    Colonel Briggs: Sir, you were sleeping.

    General Donald McClintock: I am never *that* asleep, Briggs. Now you find him and you arrest him.

  • Sam Daniels: Do you know the incubation period?

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: No. But it kills in two or three days. The mortality rate is 100%.

    Sam Daniels: Jesus. Could an infected person have gotten out of the village?

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: If he did, he'd be dead or dying in the jungle. And it's 50 miles to the nearest village.

    Sam Daniels: First case? Patient zero?

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: A young man called Murazo worked with a white man to build a-a road into Kinshasa. And when he returned, he was sick.

    Sam Daniels: I see.

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: And he drank from this well. From there it spread through the entire village.

    [Sam takes a look at the well, and then turns back to Benjamin]

    Sam Daniels: Did you identify the carrier? The host?

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: No. When he arrived the boy was incoherent. He died, uh, two hours later. He couldn't tell us how he got it.

    [Sam looks up and notices a healthy villager chanting on the hills]

    Sam Daniels: He's not sick.

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: [looks toward the villager] He's a local juju man. Witch doctor. He stayed in his cave a whole week.

    Sam Daniels: I'd like to talk to him.

    Dr. Benjamin Iwabi: No, he talks to me. You see, he believes that the gods were awoken from their sleep by the men cutting down the trees where no man should be. And the gods got angry. This is a punishment.