can take a look

Kadin 2022-04-21 09:01:26

I watched an imax, but the location was not very good, so that the viewing effect was not very good. In the first half of the movie, I was a little irritable, I couldn't see the expressions of people when I read the subtitles, and I didn't know what they were talking about when I saw them. And the first half didn't attract me too much. Then look on, more and more into the state. In the film, there was one scene that made me want to cry. The volcano erupted and everyone left, leaving the herbivorous dinosaur standing on the shore, roaring, as if crying, so pitiful. Another is the dinosaur that only bumps into people, it's kind of cute. Finally, there is our protagonist, Blue, the little one, I also like it very much, and when the male lead it to go with him in the end, it glances at the cage, it chooses a person, it chooses freedom. Every life is equal, but the strong eat the weak. If dinosaurs still exist, there may not be us. I was frightened several times during the movie viewing process, and friends who go to the movies should pay attention. Just for the special effects of this movie, it's worth four points.

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Extended Reading
  • Damaris 2022-03-20 09:01:20

    "The Legend of Immortality Henry Wu II"

  • Marge 2022-03-19 09:01:03

    The protagonist is so awesome, and the Jedi came to life in an instant! When the magma arrived, they stood up in shock! There was no stampede incident when running with the big dinosaur! Does Marvel have a Dinosaur Man setting?

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom quotes

  • Ian Malcolm: I think that we should allow our, uh, magnificent , glorious dinosaurs to be taken out by the volcano.

    Senator Sherwood: [crowd mumbling] Silence please!

    Ian Malcolm: As deeply sad as that would be, we altered the course of natural history. This is a correction.

    Senator Sherwood: Are you suggestion that the Almighty is taking matters into his own hands?

    Ian Malcolm: Senator, with all do respect, God's not part of the equation. No. What I mean is that in the last century, we amassed landmark technological power. And we've consistently proven ourselves incapable of handling that power. 80 years ago, who could have predicted nuclear proliferation and then there it was. And now we've got genetic power, so how long is it going to take to spread around the globe and what's going to be done with it? It ain't going to stop with the de-extinction of the dinosaurs.

    Senator Sherwood: I'm not sure I know that you're talking about.

    Ian Malcolm: I'm talking about man-made cataclysmic change.

    Senator Sherwood: What kinda of change?

    Ian Malcolm: Change is like death. You don't know what it looks like till you're standing at the gates.

  • Ian Malcolm: How many times do you have to see the evidence? How many times must the point be made? We're causing our own extinction. Too many red lines have been crossed. And our home has, in fundamental ways, been polluted by avarice and political megalomania. Genetic power has now been unleashed and of course, that's going to be catastrophic. This change was inevitable from the moment we brought the first dinosaur back from extinction. We convince ourselves that sudden change is something that happens outside the normal order of things, like a car crash, or that it's beyond our control, like a fatal illness. We don't conceive of sudden, radical, irrational change as woven into the very fabric of existence. Yet, I can assure you, it most assuredly is. And it's happening now. Humans and dinosaurs are now gonna be force to coexist. These creatures were here before us. And if we're not careful, they're gonna be here after. We're gonna have to adjust to new threat that we can't imagine. We've entered a new era. Welcome to Jurassic World.