In fact, watch it again, many places in the film hint at the audience,
such as the alien at 29:37: Are you sure you are tracking hackers?
At 54:30, a crazy old woman drove over and paid attention to their conversation. It was very incongruous. The male protagonist asked,
"Where is this?" The
old woman said, "It doesn't matter, I have seen many people. Don't think about it, he will always protect us." The
hero asked again: "I'm sorry, who will protect us?" The
old woman said: "God and angels, who else?" The
camera inadvertently showed Jesus on the car key, I think it was The core of the film~
61.30 The old woman was arrested for interrogation. She was completely incoherent, and even a little abnormal. At the end, she said "they will come to catch you."
This kind of clue-based dialogue
is interspersed with many high-speed and slow-motion films in the film. , implying that their beauty on earth is gone. . It is more like a kind of nostalgia
for the last dialogue of the film, the person wearing protective clothing: "Look at yourself, the perfect upgraded version of human beings, and the alien technology, our highest technology" The
protagonist finally found out that the "tramp" is this alien People, aliens said: "Yes, I brought you here, you came to me yourself, so you have to ask yourself, what are you looking for?
" Slow play the clip. This time the protagonist realizes that they really can't go back.
. In the end, the homeless man "removed his helmet" and the protagonist broke through the "mirror image" and discovered the sinicized universe and "ship". . .
ps: Personally, I think that the strongest impact of this film on me lies in people’s beliefs. People who were taken away suddenly lost their beliefs. The true God of Jesus Christ has completely become an image. The only thing left is alien technology. You are sent into a space capsule, wandering in the universe without direction, maintaining an immortal life, sooner or later, you will also go crazy, and people's beliefs will be swallowed up by the vast and boundless universe. . .
View more about The Signal reviews