Bathed in the sun, I can't imagine what the sun will be like if it "dies". All things stop growing, the day is darker than the night, the world sinks into the cold, what will we do? The movie unfolds in this context. Humans on Earth will not sit still. They want to re-activate the sun by throwing nuclear bombs, and a few people set off in spaceships with the hope of all mankind. The story is very old-fashioned, it's a very traditional disaster movie, and of course it ends with the killing of the future. The special effects that others think are simple, I think it is very exciting, and the shooting is full of momentum. The Internet has always started to look for scientific loopholes in movies. Just like every science fiction movie, the scientific details inside will inevitably be despised by them one by one. In fact, science and film as a genre of literature and art use different ways of thinking. Science requires rigor and logic, while film needs dramatic conflict and plot promotion. If films strictly follow scientific logic, there will be not so many things. Happened, and there would be no progression of the movie's plot. Just imagine if a few serious and rigorous scientists were to carry out the mission, all trained to successfully overcome the weaknesses of human nature, the entire plan would be as accurate as a clock, and the mission would be successfully completed naturally and returned safely, the movie would be like a record of the flight commander. Just as boring, bland, and drowsy. A movie is a movie, and watching a movie is watching the development of the plot and the conflict of human nature.
At first, I didn't understand why everyone on the spacecraft had such a deep affection for the sun. In order to feel the brightness of the sun, they risked being blinded. Later, I realized that people always know how to cherish when they lose like this, like health, like feelings .
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