'Gravity' Movie Guide - All About Your Newborn Mother, Womb, Umbilical Cord

Adeline 2022-04-21 09:01:08





Scary spoilers stay out!


Even if the film is spoiled, it will not affect the viewing experience at all!
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The first 20 minutes is a space odyssey scenery film, no need to read subtitles, just focus on the picture.

The sense of weightlessness of free movement following the camera instantly strikes.

How beautiful is the earth on the other side?

Terrific! very beautiful!

However, the impermanence of the universe that breeds and destroys life erupts at the most beautiful moment of the picture.

The next 65 minutes are popcorn escape from space.

However, this is a responsible and ideal "popcorn".

The film depicts the relationship and status quo of human beings in the universe and earth in depth and detail.

The universe breeds the earth, and the earth breeds human beings.

In the process of Ryan and Matt rushing to the "International Station", the audience will consciously or unconsciously follow Ryan's first-person camera to breathe quickly or even suffocate. This sense of substitution is like being in a space cap, breathing percentage Oxygen continues to decline, so your breathing becomes rapid, and you are about to suffocate. What should you do if you are worried about the lack of oxygen? congratulations! Enter the play!

Just when he was about to suffocate, Ryan entered the International Space Station, turned on the oxygen, and took off the space suit. The picture after taking off the space suit is exactly the posture of the baby curled up in the mother's womb. It is safe and comfortable. Although it is static, it is full of vitality. The safety rope floating behind is like the umbilical cord that connects the mother to the baby. It is the supply of life, and it also contains the murderous intention to destroy life.

This foreshadowing of the umbilical cord hints at a key plot point that follows. Matt lost in this process left Ryan with a life guide - learn to let go.

Quietly waiting for death or risking your life? To live or to die is always a dilemma.

Human fragility and persistence are highlighted in choices, and wisdom and instinct are reflected in survival.

Finally, the torment of breaking through the atmosphere and burning is the struggle of the newborn before birth. It is this time to live or die. The escape pod plunges into the water, like a newborn trying to get out of the amniotic fluid. After the scorching rescue capsule, the original joy of encountering water has become suffocated and nervous by the murderous intention of almost drowning. Vitality and murder coexist, the newborn of the human universe must be brave and persistent.

Finally, when the former mother stumbled forward like a newborn baby, this was the beginning of a new life, the sun, the air, the river, and the land were full of vitality and hope.

The universe symbolizes the mother, the space capsule symbolizes the womb, and the newborn breaks free from the umbilical cord. The author of this film is in awe of life and nature, which makes people sigh. People who have never been to space should go to the cinema quickly. It is better to go to the IMAX 3D cinema to feel the feeling of roaming in space.

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Extended Reading

Gravity quotes

  • Matt Kowalski: You never flown the Soyuz either?

    Ryan Stone: Only the simulator.

    Matt Kowalski: Then you know.

    Ryan Stone: But I crashed it.

    Matt Kowalski: It's a simulator. That's what it's designed for.

  • Mission Control: Matt, do you have visual on just what Mission Specialist Shariff is doing up there?

    Matt Kowalski: He appears to be doing some form of the Macarena or that would be just a best guess scenario on my part.