I love this apocalyptic film, and I have imagined countless times how I would live if I was the only one left in the world. "I Am Legend" gave me an interpretation of this imagination, and this film gave me another interpretation of this imagination.
After entering the apocalypse inexplicably overnight, the male protagonist immediately accepts the status quo (no wonder, under the education of zombie-themed film and television dramas in recent years, the male protagonist is no stranger to the status quo: headshots, infections, voice attraction and other knowledge systems are immediately established and Flexible use. After a short rest, he immediately began to explore the environment, and quickly established this apartment building as his "safe house". The apartment building happened to have not many "miscellaneous soldiers". After a simple cleaning, the resources of the whole building are available for him One person owns food, water, electricity, gas, and even entertainment facilities. It is not a problem to live here for a year. If the exploration area can be expanded, the rooftop can be developed, the soil can be moved to grow crops, and the livestock scattered on the streets can be searched for captive breeding and artificial breeding. , increase the maintenance settings of the vehicle, and the male protagonist can live here for several years. Of course, the film began to develop into the plots of "Space Traveler", "Deep Space Amnesia", and "The Martian". However, let I was a little surprised that in just half a year, the male protagonist began to feel uncomfortable with "loneliness". When I think of the male protagonist as a literary youth, I can understand better: no one resonates, what joy in life, and what sorrow in death, Let's do it (cough, off topic).
I once wrote about the horror of "loneliness" in the film review of "Space Travelers". When the hero in the film realized that the girl had been dead for a long time, I thought he would be like Colonel Neville in "I Am Legend". Rush to the zombie horde and die, thinking he'll be waiting to die like Chuck in "Desert Island". But, perhaps the sense of despair has not reached the extreme, the male protagonist burst out with a strong desire to survive, and used the grappling hook to take the first step in the "flying over the eaves" parkour mode.
When the male protagonist climbed to the rooftop of another building and looked around, a thick live-action scene of "Dying Light" appeared. I was so excited, as if a new vision of survival in the apocalypse had opened up.
I'm hungry....the film came to an abrupt end...
Leave me sitting in the chair watching the title for a long time
"the night eats the world"
and then
the light is dying
It would be great if there was a sequel...
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