One will succeed

Fletcher 2022-03-20 09:01:46

The films I saw casually on cctv-6 looked like blockbusters, and I just watched them because I was bored. I didn't expect that in the end I didn't have the patience to watch it -- I really can't stand that bad director.
I didn't expect that the director was actually John Woo -- in fact, it should be John Woo. It is only a Chinese director who can film this kind of heroism of "one will succeed and ten thousand bones will die" to a disgusting level.
As far as I watched the episode (about 30 minutes), I probably understood the plot, it was a very old-fashioned story, the performance was quite satisfactory, and the protagonist was a slap in the face. In the end I really couldn't stand it.
In order to set off the protagonist's bravery, the director made everyone else have to die stupidly and inexplicably -- people with a little conscience should not bear it. Or maybe you should lose your conscience when watching a movie, so I choose not to watch it. . .

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Extended Reading
  • Annabell 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    The film that does not put pigeons is not a typical John Woo film. It is licensed in Hollywood. I remember that it was introduced in a certain issue of "Universal Screen" in 1996.

  • Bonnie 2022-03-28 09:01:03

    No face-changing plot tension, but still good

Broken Arrow quotes

  • Riley Hale: [crawling through a small tunnel] This seems like it doesn't go anywhere

    [drops into river below]

  • [after the nuke is detonated in the mine]

    Giles Prentice: Colonel Wilkins, sir? Uh, shouldn't we be evacuating?

    Colonel Max Wilkins: [covers his phone] We're fine, it was underground.

    [into phone]

    Colonel Max Wilkins: Colonel Wilkins to General Creeley...

    Giles Prentice: Are you sure? I mean, how do you know that?

    Colonel Max Wilkins: [covers the phone again] Because if it had been a surface detonation, we'd have felt a different kind of ground tremor. We'd also be burned, blind, and dying.