When I first saw those aliens in the slum, the camera was dangling, flesh, blood, etc. The screen in the theater was so big, and they were all flickering close-ups and close-ups.
Slowly, the main plot emerges, and it is wonderful.
It may be because I watched the film after just glanced at the poster, so I didn't have much psychological expectations before going there. At the beginning of the film, when the plot was stalked, it was also a very bland interview. Heavy-___-""The picture is very realistic, the special effects are very good, and it is still very touching at the end.
The film captures one point very well, which is to put the timid protagonist in an extremely embarrassing situation. During the process of mutation, for a period of time, he became a species between humans and aliens. He suffered physical torture and spiritual torture. If you want to get through the difficulties, you can't back down, and the humans around him begin to doubt him, and even want to use him for research. Humans can't be trusted anymore? Then you can only take the step that you don't want to take the most, and unite with the aliens. But are aliens really reliable?
"Who to believe" and "What to do" are two questions that have been entangled in the protagonist as the plot progresses. . . .
there was no way to see that the thin, heavily accented man would be the heroic protagonist. But in the end he was really MAN.
After reading it, I'm thinking that every day human beings wonder "Are there any aliens?" "Where are the aliens?" If the aliens really come, they will be helpless.
Yes, the Shrimp Man promised to come back in three years, and I'm looking forward to the second installment. Maybe the second part is district 10, huh.
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