The scientist's question is the question throughout, "Why can't I change the past?"
After two failures to save his lover, he doubted that even with a time machine, it seemed that the fait accompli could not be changed. In pursuit, he went to the distant future.
After going through all kinds of things, he found out that the deceased has passed away and cannot be traced, and only now, there is still hope. The heroine answered him well with one sentence, "Why do you want to change the past?"
Or in other words, the choice made you and nothing else.
The film's perspective is wide and unique, profound and evocative. Although the narrative is a little simple, it does not hinder its overall height, and it is very successful from the perspective of adaptation.
But after watching it all the way, at the end, what impressed me the most was the soundtrack. A search of the background turns out to be Klaus Badelt, who has composed music for "Pearl Harbor", "Gladiator", "Pirates of the Caribbean", "Poseidon" and other films, and the orchestral part is sometimes huge. Lin, sometimes beautiful and soft, fits with the pictures of different eras in time travel, which makes people yearn for it.
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