I was chasing Tsui Hark's movie recently, and I saw Anita Mui in it, a director and an actor I liked, so I watched it. I haven't watched 1.2. After all, as a girl, I'm not very interested in Chow Yun-fat's films. This one is purely for Mei.
After reading it, I felt a little messy, so I sorted it out myself: I started to mark and went to Vietnam to pick up my second uncle and Amin. Because of the war, I met the big guy Jieying to settle all kinds of things for them with his excellent connections and gun skills. Worship and admiration. After returning to Hong Kong, Jieying followed for love, and the love contradictions of the three were revealed. This is the appearance of Mr. He, Jieying's old lover who lives and dies. Mr. He is very possessive and ruthless. He shot Mark and Amin and killed his second uncle. Jieying had to go back to Vietnam with Mr. Ho to work on business, but before leaving, he still had a thought, new hatred piled up old hatred, Mark and Amin returned to Vietnam, Amin and Jieying met privately and almost died, here Mark came to question Jieying also gave her two slaps, I'm a little confused... Mr. He was killed and a conflict broke out. Jieying brought explosives and prepared to die together. When he was about to die, he marked the oil-headed coat with a long gun? Than dead, Jieying still spoke his lines in one breath, Amin Mark carried Jieying everywhere to look for the hospital, brought a mess of war, and the three of them got on a military plane to escape from hell just before the war broke out. On the face of Jieying, who was snuggled in Mark's arms, during the singing of "Song of the Sunset", Jieying put out his last breath.
So I picked up a whole set. I think the theme of this story is really not clear, and there are many plots in it. Personally, I think it was shot for male audiences. Dress up, some intentional, not much to watch. Personally, I think Leung Ka Fai's character is cuter, so I would choose Amin.
In general, the most impressive thing is the portraits of the last days. There is no room for all the subjective needs of people in the torrent of war.
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