The completion of the shadow is very high, and the suspense is drawn through the dialogue between Fletcher and Raymond. It is progressive and fascinating, and deserves five stars. However, if the protagonist Mickey is regarded as the British Empire, the various obscenities revealed from it are full of self-consolation and make people feel uncomfortable, so I can only give one star. The first discomfort was Mickey's first conversation with Dry Eye. Western literary and artistic works have always been full of arrogance and prejudice against the Chinese, which is evident by the name "dry eye". It's not as good as "Amin" played by Awkwafina in "Jumanji 2: Battle for the Peak" (although it is a prejudice and curiosity). Mickey's words when he taught dry eyes sounded majestic: a dragon came to the lion and asked him how to occupy the territory, the lion answered impatiently and let it go away, the dragon asked again inexplicably, and then the lion led the dragon into the wild to be killed. . The reference to animals here is very obvious. It is nothing more than the director's warning to China not to intrude on the territory of our British Empire.
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