Let's sleep on the plane later. . . .

Rosemary 2022-03-23 09:03:16


This is a movie from nearly 20 years ago, not counting Stephen. Jin's classics are not watched by many people, the special effects of that era are really a bit unpopular, and the plot is a bit lengthy. It took nearly three hours to watch these ten people chatting continuously, but even after nearly 20 years of watching today Come on, the movie is really scary. After watching this, does anyone want to travel back to ancient times? Our past time is eaten little by little, and there is no sign of life there?

The ending is actually a bit unexpected. I always feel that the director did not explain clearly, what does it mean when the watch stops? When they travel to the past time, the time goes faster and faster. The black and white alternation is only 40 minutes, and they are never hungry. Then 15 minutes into the future, the time will become slower and slower. A normal alternation of night and day will Will it take a month, will they have to eat many meals a day, will their bodies age faster than those of the future?

The supernatural powers of the little girl in the movie are a bit boring. . .

On the contrary, the 2b financier is very wonderful, really wonderful. . . .

Let's think about it, I just think, it's more reliable to sleep on the plane in the future.

View more about The Langoliers reviews

Extended Reading

The Langoliers quotes

  • Bob Jenkins: Let's say that every now and then a hole appears in the stream of time. Not a time-warm. A rip. A time rip. A rip in the central fabric.

    Don Gaffney: That's the craziest thing I ever heard of!

    Craig Toomy: Amen!

    Bob Jenkins: Mr. Gaffney, the situation we're in right now, this is crazy. So let's say that such rips do occur every now and then. It would be similar to rare weather phenomenons that are reported. Upside-down tornadoes, circular rainbows, daytime starlight.

    Captain Brian Engle: The aurora borealis.

    Bob Jenkins: [Bob looks to Brian in surprise] What?

    Captain Brian Engle: There was an aurora borealis over the Mojavi Desert when we left LAX. We were supposed to fly right into it.

    Bob Jenkins: Then that's it. An auroa over the desert. That strengthens my point. If we were to fly into that, and it was a time-rip then that means we're no longer in our own time, ladies and gentlemen.

  • Don Gaffney: [listening to Jenkins' time rip theory] That's the craziest thing I've ever heard.

    Craig Toomy: Amen!