Purely wanting to feel the atmosphere of "Hurricane Rescue"-style where everything is under control, I counted on Uncle Neeson's aura to hold it, and turned out to be the spokesperson and representative of Desperate Atheism, how depressing.
I think the inertia that the uncle of logic, which is similar to "Bourne Bourne", has not subsided, so I always feel that the logic will be at a high level this time, which is disappointing. The protagonist has a depression-style suicide complex, and because his father's four poems saved himself, he became the second edition of Beethoven who choked his fate. It’s acceptable if it’s reasonable and reasonable. Maybe it’s because I’ve been complaining and dominated me when watching the film, and in the end, the irresistible depression has become all my impressions of the film. Maybe the director’s purpose is to convey a depressed emotion to the audience?
If there is something shocking, it is not the ending, and it is not the 2-second "easter egg" after the subtitles. But after the teammate's drowning, Uncle Nissen questioned the sky. In fact, I think that true atheists also have atheistic fears, a fear of the supernatural, which makes it impossible to keep a little faith in things that are incomprehensible, no matter what that faith is. Nissen questioned the sky continuously, with a strong tone, then turned to prayer, and finally said to himself, "I still have to rely on myself."
In the end, I pay tribute to the director's courage, and his firmness to atheism. I can't do it.
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