The world is continued, and so is love!

Gerhard 2022-04-23 07:01:23

Usually I always like some fresh and literary books and videos. Occasionally watching some large-scale sci-fi films with super visual impact like "Terminator: Genesis", to stimulate the long-silent visual nerves, has a particularly enjoyable feeling.
Because I am not a sci-fi fan or a magician myself, those well-known sci-fi series have only been heard. Just know a thing or two about the high-profile celebrities in the Hollywood movie factory, such as Schwarzenegger, Jason Clarke, Sam Mendes and so on. Therefore, I have no sensitivity at all to those skills and terms that are only high-end and atmospheric in the film. XX programs, XX systems, and XX devices, I listened to the fog in the clouds. I have a new term, and I can only blame my brain for being too small to hold these "tall ones".
This film did give me a great visual impact and shock, but what impressed me even more was the faint humanity and warmth that pervaded these fierce collisions, bombardments, and bombardments. The good medicine for "strong confrontation" and "big impact" will not make the whole film violent from beginning to end, otherwise the audience watching with their breathless eyes under those violent scenes will probably be suffocated.
I don't want to give too much admiration to the film's stunts and production level. There is no doubt that American Hollywood's film shooting technology is absolutely world-class, and it even leaves many countries behind. I want to talk about a few emotional scenes that left a deep impression on me.
Sarah and Reese gradually fell in love in the process of getting along, but they tried their best to restrain from falling in love, because Sarah didn't want Reese to die for herself, and they had seen the future of their children to the Terminator. Don't want to repeat the same mistakes. For the sake of world peace, they choose rationality when the swords are drawn, choose to take care of all beings in the world, and resolutely kill their personal emotions in the cradle. This is a topic we have been arguing about for a long time: when personal interests collide with collective interests, how do you choose? There is no uniform answer, and there is no right or wrong, because any choice has its rationality in a specific environment, and people are born with the right to choose independently. We cannot regard those who choose the collective interests as people of high moral character. , while spurning those who choose personal gain. Because how do you know that when you actually come to this crossroads yourself, you will not hesitate to go to the "collectivist" side?
Who said that Schwarzenegger can only punch hand-to-hand and show off his muscular body? From the inside to the outside, people are all dramas in their bones, okay? Occasionally, she will smile and smile cutely. Finally, when he made the ultimate lore with Skynet (Genesis) and John Connor, he looked back at Reese with firm eyes and said: Please protect my Sarah. In that scene, I believe that there should be no tears in the audience, right?
And the one-of-a-kind love that Dad has for Sarah is really touching. His mission, or in technical terms, his code (function) setup is to protect Sarah. Therefore, this love is devoted, pure and flawless, and does not ask for anything in return. Isn't this kind of love a reflection of all parental love in the world?
In short, the films that can impress me are good, like, praise!

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Extended Reading

Terminator Genisys quotes

  • Garbage Man: [the garbage truck's engine stops] What the hell? Goddamn son of a bitch...

  • [first lines]

    Kyle Reese: [narrating] Before they died, my parents told me stories about how the world once was; what it was like long before I was born; before the war with the machines. They remembered a green world, vast and beautiful, filled with laughter and hope for the future. It's a world I never knew. By the time I was born, all this was gone.

    Kyle Reese: "Skynet," a computer program designed to automate missile defense. It was supposed to protect us, but that's not what happened. August 29th, 1997, Skynet woke up. It decided all of humanity was a threat to its existence.

    [scenes of mass destruction]

    Kyle Reese: It used our own bombs against us. Three billion people died of nuclear fire.

    Kyle Reese: Survivors called it Judgement Day. People lived like rats in shadows, hiding, starving, or worse, captured and put into camps for extermination. I was born after Judgement Day, into a broken world ruled by the machines. The worst were infiltration units that posed as humans. We called them Terminators.

    John Connor: [finding young Kyle in subterranean tunnels] Are there others down here?

    Kyle Reese: And then one man found me. His name was John Connor, and he changed everything. John showed us how to fight back; how to rise up. He freed prisoners. He taught us how to slash the machines to scrap. People whisper about John and wonder how he can know the things he does. They use words like prophet. But John's more. We're here because tonight, he's going to lead us to crush Skynet for good.