The storyline is too simple: an extremely awesome drone fighter jet has to learn from three extremely awesome TOP GUNs, and nothing has been learned—the director gave the drone. Several close-up shots of the computer are probably meant to show that the computer was deeply shocked by the human brain-in an accident, it was opened by lightning, and overheard human conversations, and felt that I was more awkward, so I decided to make a mistake. , Which triggered a story of a fighter jet that was more dazzling than F1 or "Initial D"; of course, it was the end that humans moved the machine to voluntarily dedicate themselves to humans.
The scriptwriter is very poor, which fully reflects the Yankee’s self-righteous and world-centered main ideas; the character’s emotional portrayal is very poor-partly because of the dubbing-how do the lead plane and the wingman get together, only the words of the deputy wingman "you treat her What did you do?", and there is only one sentence "the navy will not allow us to do this"; a senior man who is an operation commander decided to disclose his secrets to the enemy before and after a phone call. The enemy's hand removes hidden dangers for itself; the complex psychological changes of drones from acting on their own to obediently obedient and finally dedicated to their lives are naturally even more difficult to express in the language of the picture, "pull the button" is understandable.
The only thing I can see is stunts. Anyway, I have never seen an airplane fly like this. I can't help but blush for the timid mentality of holding on to the armrest when I get a little troublesome when flying. But the stunts are a bit too much: the top fighters built in billions of dollars use machine gun sparring in air combat, which is quite funny. Exhausted Mac.
There is one detail that I really don’t understand: the thin air at 50,000 feet can cause a big explosion? Where's the oxygen?
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