Every character in "Crossing Siberia" is basically black. The heroine Jesse has a depraved past, and after getting married, she can't stand the temptation at all. In the end, he killed the drug dealer. Spanish drug dealer Carlos is a repeat offender of robbery, rape, drug trafficking, and murder. He flirts with Jesse in front of his girlfriend. This is not romantic, but obscene. His girlfriend, Abby, is not a good person either. She sells drugs, kills people, and finally wants to make money and run away alone. But it's a pity that the heroine inadvertently sabotaged the plan because Jesse killed the man and she didn't know the body was there. Ben Kingsley's old police officer Glinko is a character who shows that he is right, secretly colluding with the drug cartel, and finally escapes the pursuit of the police by killing his accomplices. Only the male protagonist seems to be a little pure, and it may be that this role is needed to soften the whole tone of the film, so at the beginning of the abandoned train, the director was reluctant to let him die. . .
The director of "The Mechanic" has made another stand-up work, and the feeling of inner fear is still good. . .
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Transsiberian reviews