The success of good people is often built on the unprofessionalism of bad people

Carmine 2022-09-08 23:00:51

OK, I admit that I was horrified and suspenseful in the process of watching the film, but I also admit that the following comments are a bit picky. The "vulnerability" of such films is that the villains always have a killing ability and do not use them well, or they are not decisive enough, and always let the protagonist escape by chance.
Example 1: The slum apartment murder scene. The killer can easily kill the black man in the corridor, but when killing the heroine, he has to use a syringe instead of a gun. OK, maybe they are afraid of disturbing the neighbors. However, the wall was also broken in the subsequent fight. . .
Example 2: The scene where the attempted murder was attempted in the parking lot. One is a well-trained killer, the other is a tried-and-true secret agent, but he dawdled while killing the male protagonist, beating him first, and then creating a scene where he died of drug use, only to be killed by an unscrupulous man. Trained women were hit and killed by their cars (one was hit and killed, the other was trapped in a car and fell off a high-rise building). This is the work level of the so-called "tight work" by the old agent of Yuandong Germany.
So, I have to say: the success of good people is often built on the unprofessionalism of bad people. Of course, that's just what happened in the movie.

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Extended Reading

Unknown quotes

  • Ernst Jürgen: In the Stasi, we had a basic principle: ask enough questions and a man who is lying will eventually change his story. But the man who tells the truth cannot change his, however unlikely his story sounds.

  • Rodney Cole: Oh look at that.

    [holding up picture]

    Rodney Cole: What kind of car is that?

    Ernst Jürgen: That's a Volga GAZ-24. Suspension of a donkey cart and smelled like a tannery. Vanished as quickly as the wall.