After that, the film began to turn to a crazy development route. Unkillable aliens came out, a certain security agent was hit by a bomb (?) from the sky and disappeared, and a black policewoman who looked very stylish was sucked into the sky. Since then disappeared, and then the male lead was taken away. The female lead came to an alien base-like airport and found that the doctor was also an "informed person." Can not be obliterated. In the end, the heroine still did not forget her son, so the alien who failed the test was sucked away by the sky. . . Everything is back to normal again. . .
So I was completely speechless.
Americans have always had a UFO complex, whether it’s the real Roswell incident, or a series of films describing alien conspiracies, such as the X-Files. The so-called aliens must have some conspiracy theories. In collusion with the government, Shenlong never sees the end. In short, that's the case. By the way, when I was a kid, I really watched a lot of flying saucer exploration, and the description of the science fiction world was psychologically shadowed. For example, in the middle of the night, I would dream of an alien flying saucer hovering, or a terrible white coat and a scalpel. Of course, as I grow older, I don’t know when it will heal--|||
Looking back at this film, the subject matter is neither new nor logical, and the ending makes me fall through my glasses, and it is too idealistic and beautiful. melted. Of course, the lens is still very beautiful, and Julianne Moore's performance is also very wonderful.
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