Is it the future version of Robinson Crusoe?

Deonte 2022-03-20 09:01:08


A typical Hollywood-style sci-fi movie,
Mark is not the kind of omnipotent hero. The hero of the times is suitable for use in the movie. He was misjudged to death and abandoned by his teammates. He had been lost and helpless and died. Smart Mark saved himself.
His humor and his chatter all showed a lovely side. There are a few scenes that are funny, such as planting potatoes, transforming the space capsule, and talking to the earth.
The movie is great on the whole. It uses some simple physics knowledge to explain scientific self-help. The rapid combustion of hydrogen and oxygen can produce water that can really save lives. Various professional terms are easy to come by, which makes you feel very tall and easy to understand. The genre of science fiction movies is really the thinking of science students.
The imagination of all kinds of scenery makes us think that it is Mars. The spaceship is really cool. I like it. Mark is so handsome. The actors are also really hard. In more than 500 solar days, he loses weight again and again in order to show the lack of food. This I give full marks for makeup effects.
Looking forward to the next movie!

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Extended Reading
  • Nannie 2022-04-24 07:01:02

    actually. . . The whole film is very good, but when I saw the National Space Administration, I was really struck by those few Chinese words in the play.

  • Ole 2021-10-20 18:59:38

    Space movies can not be made as a microcosm of a person fighting alone. No matter how desperate there is, there is the last point of hope that can not be extinguished. I like this too much. This kind of setting is also very suitable for Matt Damon himself.

The Martian quotes

  • Mark Watney: [after finding out the intercept distance is too far] Did you say 312? Yeah, I'll just wave to you guys as I go by.

  • Mark Watney: I've been thinking about laws on Mars. There's an international treaty saying that no country can lay claim to anything that's not on Earth. By another treaty if you're not in any country's territory, maritime law aplies. So Mars is international waters. Now, NASA is an American non-military organization, it owns the Hab. But the second I walk outside I'm in international waters. So Here's the cool part. I'm about to leave for the Schiaparelli Crater where I'm going to commandeer the Ares IV lander. Nobody explicitly gave me permission to do this, and they can't until I'm on board the Ares IV. So I'm going to be taking a craft over in international waters without permission, which by definition... makes me a pirate. Mark Watney: Space Pirate.