After watching it for 18 minutes, I really can't stand it anymore, what the heck. If I had to think of a description, it would be discordant and discordant. It's been 18 minutes, and I haven't been into the play very much. The sense of immersion is really bad. Xu Fan's exaggerated performance at the beginning (seeing Jackie Chan being beaten and shouting exaggeratedly) is a sketch? The lines are also vulgar, and the Jianghu artist was arrested and got out of the car saying that he scared the baby to death. . . When the Japanese soldiers were being beaten, they kept talking about Yazhudie, and Jackie Chan said that there was a sack of potatoes. This is a rotten stalk many years ago. Just like a bunch of buzzwords that Feng Gong tried to please the audience for the Spring Festival Gala. The plot is also flawed. At the beginning of the story, why did they grab the train? There's no motive, just adding to the suspicion. There is also the modern play at the beginning, where a child visits an old train, and a child sneaks into the car to see the flying tiger mark, which leads to the story, this is the introduction. . . All right. Thinking of Han Geng's modern drama at the beginning of taking the Tiger Mountain by outsmarting, whose intention is still unclear. Fear.
The above is what I felt after watching the movie for 18 minutes. Yes, only eighteen minutes. It seems that I haven't waited for Wang Kai to appear, but I don't want to wait.
Oh, and what's very confusing is Jackie Chan's Hong Kong accent. He is afraid of suddenly speaking Cantonese on the scene when he plays a movie every minute. Jaycee Chan is also, eh, wait a minute, Jaycee?
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Railroad Tigers reviews