At that time, when I saw this movie, I was still a child in junior high school. Because the winter vacation is coming soon, the test report card is called a thief, and the school issues movie tickets, thinking that I will definitely not get out when I go back. During that time, I had a holiday and went to the movies, just watching The Day After Tomorrow.
Like some epic disaster movies, only enough to go to the cinema. Macro scenes, tragic music and tense atmosphere do not allow you to make a little mistake. In the dark, I seem to be a member of the day after tomorrow. When the tsunami struck, my heart tightened involuntarily and I even forgot to breathe. I escaped, but it was dangerous.
What impressed me the most was that people rushed to the city library crazily, which was a place with high terrain. This is the safest place when the tsunami strikes. Seeing that the tsunami is coming, the man is desperate to pull the woman regardless of whether he has reached the safety zone.
Minutes, many people's lives were swallowed up by the tsunami at this moment, leaving no trace. At the end of the film, human beings usher in a brand-new world, and the earth wins new vitality, which is natural. At the end of the film, people feel the feeling of the rest of their lives, and feel inexplicably moved. The glory and greatness of mankind, as well as the smallness and conceit, are all integrated into one, and I don't know what kind of feelings it is. Little me, shocked by this movie, forgot to go back to see my mother's report card, which was even more terrible than the tsunami.