
More than once I saw someone recommend The Night the Comet Came, and when I saw the name again a few days ago, I decided I was going to write this movie this week.
I didn't have any imagination about it before I watched it, because I couldn't guess what kind of movie it would be from the name alone, and I was even more confused when I saw a ping-pong racket in its poster. As a result, when I looked at it, I found that it was a movie about quantum physics. I have to say that the way is very unique.
Most of the movies we see about quantum physics are science fiction films, and they don't just revolve around quantum physics. And this movie is completely from the perspective of life to talk about quantum physics, and the whole article is only a theme of quantum physics.
In the same unique way, there is the film's camera, if I don't see too many people recommending, I may turn it off a few minutes before watching it. Because the footage of this movie is dizzying, it is different from most film shots, but more like the footage of life documentaries or news interviews. The shots are full and unstable (supposedly deliberate), and the light and shadow are also particularly unfilled (not because of the night), which I don't like very much in terms of look and feel.
If I hadn't learned anything about quantum physics before watching this movie, I probably would have liked it even more. Not coincidentally, I've read books about it before. Some of the logic in the film is a bit different from what I understand about quantum physics, although I don't necessarily understand it right (or no one can say quantum physics clearly), and the movie is inherently dramatic, but the preconceived notions still affect my movie experience.
While it's really clever in content, it's disappointing. I found out that it was after telling quantum physics, and the expectations were getting bigger and bigger, the story was going on one after another, and I was waiting for a climax, and at the same time I was always thinking about how the director was going to end it.
The climax was not waited for, although I did not know if it would be reached, but I just felt that quantum physics could play a lot of flowers, and my expectations might far exceed the presentation of the movie. But I have to admit, I liked the last shot of the ending, where Amy has two rings in her hand and Kevin is another one on the phone.
What makes me feel the most uncomfortable is that there is a very important twist in the movie that makes me feel very blunt. That is, when everyone began to find some abnormalities, Amy actually proposed to find a book at home, and finally magically found a book about quantum physics by Hugh's brother, and the story began to slowly enter the world of quantum physics from here. This looks really blunt...
Of course, on the whole, this must be a very good movie. Taking an ordinary life party as the scene, taking the comet passing as the entry point, and taking quantum physics as the theme, it tells you a magical story, Zan.
I remember when I was a kid, I often saw news about comets hitting the Earth, not just comets, but all kinds of celestial bodies could hit the Earth anyway. In recent years, this kind of news seems to be invisible, I don't know whether the media doesn't like to report it, or whether there really aren't any celestial bodies about to hit the earth.
No one in the world may know what a comet will be like when it comes (even if there have been comets that have actually hit the Earth), and no one can tell what quantum physics is all about, but it is precisely because of this that the world seems more mysterious and beautiful, and can continue to surprise (or frighten people).
It's like the kind of surprise you have when you watch this movie that stimulates your worldview.