I wanted to give four stars, but after watching the feature film, I felt it was only worth two stars

Idell 2022-10-03 20:16:20

First, how did the little girl use the grass of life and death to turn dozens of men, women and children into zombies by herself. The mural didn't explain the price of bringing the dead back to life. How did she know to tie the zombies with chains in advance, and even chain dozens of zombies to her home?

Second, since the little girl knew from a young age that life and death grass can turn people into zombies, why did she have to endure humiliation in North Korea for so many years? The adult female protagonist has archery skills, can sneak, and knows the Jurchen very well. Is it because I read the script in advance and knew that the real murderer was actually a North Korean?

She turned her dead relatives into a little girl who stayed by her side as a zombie. She was bullied by others for many years, painstakingly honed her archery skills, and finally killed all the bad guys and made the entire North Korea pay for her debts. It was supposed to be a pretty cool movie. But after watching the finished film, it can only be said that it is good for each segment to be picked out individually, and the logical flaw is too uncomfortable. The art, photography and actors are all very good, and the atmosphere is also great, which is a pity.

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