The heroine in this film is very clever. She dared to enter the crowd at will because she knew that she would be fine, the poor would support him, and the villain had to maintain order and would never let her die outside of Killing Day. If the villain kills the heroine on Killing Day, it is equivalent to showing everyone that no matter how high their status is, they will be killed, and that everyone is equal on Killing Day. Killing the female protagonist outside Japan is equivalent to breaking the rules, so what if the people also learn from it? The villain will never break the fundamental policy of his own design. The heroine took advantage of this to buy the voters' hearts.
In the same way, what the heroine does not allow the villain to kill is that he cannot be made a martyr. The death of the villain is irrelevant at all. Is it because everyone in that party is in the church? As long as there are people in that party, it is equivalent to using the villain's death to prove their theory. Therefore, the heroine did not kill the villain, because most of the villain's supporters were dead, and the heroine can get a lot of support if he releases the villain overnight. Anyway, after the heroine is in power, he can backhand sue the villain, so why not let him go for one night? So the little black brother was stunned by the heroine with two or three sentences. The audience thought she was the Virgin, but in fact, only the heroine could see through the facts.
Also, when rescuing the captives captured by the villains, the heroine herself rescued them by herself. This was a political show. At that time, most of the villains were dead, and there were 3 people nearby with guns to protect themselves. It was safe. Once forced, the heroine personally rescued these people, when these people promoted the heroine to save people, and did not kill their opponents, the heroine's reputation would naturally skyrocket, and ordinary people still felt that the heroine was the Virgin Mary.
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