Kingdom: Ashin of the North movie plot
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Heloise 2022-03-15 09:01:10
Seeing a long criticizing South Korea, rising to insulting Korean movies, I just want to say that South Korea has indeed done a lot of things that are detrimental to our motherland, but any high-quality film and television work is innocent. Wang Guo was invested by Netflix and was filmed by a Korean. Both seasons are very beautiful. It is a metaphor for the dark and decadent reality of the Korean government. It uses a popular zombie theme to wrap realist works. I don't know why it has risen to the national level. South Korea’s stealing behavior is extremely shameless and it is not self-confidence in its own culture. What we can do is to resolutely resist this behavior and defend our own culture. Moreover, the country’s restriction on Korea is to prevent everyone from admiring Korean culture too much and neglecting our own culture. We only need to stick to our bottom line. What can be maintained by those domestically produced productions that plagiarize and use vulgar bridges? Korean film and television can face the darkness of their own motherland and present them with wonderful means; this is the reason why audiences have always paid for it! As long as we can not lose our roots and promote it, we can absorb the good aspects of other countries. But if it is too extreme, it is unnecessary for duck.
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Lizzie 2022-03-18 09:01:08
In the 90-minute movie, Jun Ji-hyun only appeared in the 50th minute, and zombies began to appear in about 65 minutes. So the problem also arises here, the rhythm is too problematic, the front is too much foreshadowing, it is very boring to watch, and the back is to quickly take the plot away. But the ending paragraph is still pretty hard