It was very touching. At first, I saw that the male protagonist was forced to wake up and felt that he was pitiful, but then the male protagonist destroyed the female protagonist's dormancy warehouse for his own selfish desires and forced the female protagonist to wake up. I have all my thoughts, so this is a good scumbag. Sure enough, the heroine exploded after knowing the truth, and she was relieved when she beat the hero. Then the climax came, the third dormant woke up, found out the reason, oh, this is a sinking ship, about to fall in the vast universe, well, I am small, and everyone will die. The behavior of the next male protagonist is not a big deal. The captain, who was forced to wake up, was about to end his life due to the disorder of dormancy. When he saw the captain choked silently, he couldn't help but burst into tears. The feeling of despair, depression and helplessness was too, too contagious, and his acting skills were too good. Next is the story of the hero and heroine saving the spaceship. When the hero fell out of the spaceship and was about to die, his heart was in his throat. It's impressive, but luckily the screenwriter didn't abuse the audience too much. The second half is quite tear-jerking. The director has properly grasped the audience's emotions. Let alone this kind of space love, it is quite unique. In the distant interstellar, in the vast universe, short-lived life cannot compete with time and space and travel through the future. Going to an unknown planet, the love born in the face of danger is heart-wrenching but also very powerful, because it is a sci-fi film that is beyond human logic and can be ignored. Not bad.
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