The movie is straight to the point, straight to the subject. The sense of crisis is well laid out. As for the number of bugs inside it is beyond my consideration, the presentation of the deep-sea world feels quite real.
However, at the beginning and the end, it really feels like a second-degree in the middle of a bunch of boring and serious pretend information and explanatory texts. And this kind of narrative method personally thinks it is very watery and irresponsible.
From the leading role to supporting role, the characters in it have absolutely no personality characteristics at all. Want interesting interactions with the characters? Why not watch "New Predator"!
Obviously I realize that the director wants to lean on the two roads of "Gravity" and "Extreme Cold". The problem is that the styles of the two are not next to each other.
The key point: I know that the deep ocean in reality is indeed very dark, but since the director does not care about the factual logic and the establishment of the role, can the brightness of the seabed be slightly increased so that we can thoroughly see the last big boss What's the real face?
(Didn’t the director say in the film promotion that the monster is bigger than the “Pacific Rim”, “Godzilla” or anything else? The problem is that the audience can’t see how big it is in the film, so you save the modeling files yourself. For fart?)
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