The reporters who seek promotion by reporting on this matter, the unspoken rules of competition within the reporter team, the small product manufacturers who want to be a blockbuster in the rescue with a small invention, and the vice-presidential campaign team who have been weighing whether to use the rescue as a bargaining chip for the election. The oil miners who put on "environmental protection" and loan out icebreakers...I despise them, their impure motives sully the hearts of women, children, original reporters and Rachel, even less rigid than just doing their job Colonel, but ironically they gave crucial help at every turn.
In fact, to a certain extent, I understand more about the local residents’ predation of whales. As a source of food, they respect whales more. They don't lie, they don't hide, they obey the rules of nature, they don't expect food beyond their ability, and they are real and abstinent compared to other "modern" people who are greedy and incapable of self-control with the help of technology.
Does it have to be a tragic sacrifice to evoke true feelings? After the baby whale died, Rachel's crying seemed to make more people realize the loss of a life and the meaning of this rescue, so there will be the promise of the oil driller, the insistence of the Russian captain and all the others. People's efforts, so that the final outcome, after cheering, each got his own way.
As a true story, this is good, as a movie, this is also very good, get what each wants, people are always different, what is more interesting than watching a group of complex people?
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