It is true that the father is full of love, but I think one of the questions that the film wants to discuss most is: in the face of disaster, what is the moral bottom line of people? I have always had a view: people are people in suffering, people are beasts in disasters, and people imagine themselves as gods in good times. Therefore, when people see such a story that people can still have "humanity" in a disaster, people are mostly moved. Also, I got goosebumps at the end, there are political metaphors, racial issues, it seems to be bridging the gap between tradition and the present, I can't tell the feeling, I don't like this kind of forced metaphor, but it doesn't seem to matter. A more hopeful ending. Well, is it because there are too many great prospects in the desert and grassland, there is always a feeling of a road film.
View more about Cargo reviews