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While trying to spare the earth from the peril of being solidified upon the passing of the sun, individuals around the globe assemble and choose to construct an enormous planet, so as to exchange the earth from the circle to another star system, what brings awful and dangers the lives of humankind, a gathering of valiant adolescents battle for the entire world.
CRITICS OF "The Wandering Earth (Liu Lang Di Qiu)"
New York Times
It certainly proves that the Chinese film industry can hold its own at the multiplex: It is just as awash in murky computer imagery, stupefying exposition and manipulative sentimentality as the average Hollywood tentpole.
Director Frant Gwo gives the film a surprising stateliness, especially in the scenes of the mobile Earth wandering the cosmos, wreathed in tiny blue jets that leave eerie space-contrails behind.
If you have any palate for big over-the-top scifi blockbusters I think you will really enjoy The Wandering Earth. Who knows? You might even find yourself cheering the Chinese on as they save the Earth
Even before it concludes in a bombastic manner that is more Michael Bay than Christopher Nolan, it's apparent that The Wandering Earth has made a giant leap for China's science fiction cinema but not for the genre itself.
I can't think of another recent computer-graphics-driven blockbuster that left me feeling this giddy because of its creators' consummate attention to detail and infectious can-do spirit.