I saw a lot of people compared with "Train to Busan". The characters in "Train to Busan" are more detailed. The pattern of this film is to save the world. So each is good
When I saw this movie during the epidemic, I felt very immersed in it, and I felt trapped in it. At the same time, it also gives people reverse thinking to overcome difficulties, perhaps not to suppress the virus, and choosing a way to adapt to it may also be a new way out.
Finally, here are my two favorite quotes:
1. Mother Nature is a serial killer. No one's better. More creative. But like all serial killers, she can't help the urge to want to get caught. What good are all those brilliant crimes if no one takes the credit? So she leaves the crumbs. Now, the hard part, why you spend a decade in school, is seeing the crumbs for the clues they are. Sometimes the thing you thought was the most brutal aspect of fhe virus, turns out to be the chink in its armor. And she loves disguising her weakness as strengths. She's a bitch. Nature is like a serial killer, and no one is stronger or more creative than him or her. She wants to be caught like all murderers, and it's pointless if no one finds out about a wonderful crime. So she leaves crumbs, and the hard part is that you have to read ten years to find clues in the crumbs. Sometimes the most brutal thing you see about a virus is probably its flaws. She likes to disguise weaknesses as strengths. She is a bitch. 2. If nine of us look at the same information and arrive at the exact same conclusion, it's the duty of the tenth man to disagree. No matter how improbable it may seem, the tenth man has to start digging on the assumption that the other nine are wrong. No matter how low the odds, the tenth assumes that the other nine are wrong.
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