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Major 2022-04-01 08:01:02
Personal Movie List #159. Seven Days in Hell
Personal rating: ★★★★
Don't be fooled by the name, this is a typical American spoof fake documentary! It's about two fictional tennis players going head-to-head for seven days without a winner. Of course, the process must be accompanied by various unscrupulous pornographic episodes, from sports to... -
Samara 2022-04-01 08:01:02
Highly recommended for entertaining tennis fans
First of all, this is a fake documentary full of spoofs and basic feelings. If you are a loyal fan of some players (such as Agassi or Murray, especially a certain Lei) and the image of your idol is extremely glorious, all kinds of tall, right Terriers like "mama's boy" are incapable of accepting,...

Dolph Lundgren
Personal Life
years |
Deeds |
---|---|
1973 |
KARATE training started in Sweden for rigid and soft flow. In 1974, I met with master Brian Fitkin and started training for extreme true flow. KARATE |
1976 |
Received a boxing and taekwondo scholarship provided by Washington State University in the United States |
1979 |
Served in Marine Corps , started official full-contact fighting, participated in the second (Golden) Karate, KARATE World Championship |
in 1980 |
Won the European (very true) Karate, KARATE champion in the UK |
1981 |
Re-elected the European Karate, KARATE champion; won the first stage of the black belt |
1982 |
Won the Australian Open Championship |
1983 |
Moved to New York to train professional boxing at Gleason's fitness center |
1984 |
Participate in the audition of Sylvester Stallone |
1985 |
Co-star Rocky 4
|
year 1987 |
Awarded byおおやまますたつ |
1988 |
Performed at the Australian Open in Sydney |
year 1991 |
Performed at the 5th Karate, KARATE World Championships in Tokyo |
1992 |
Performed at the Asian International Martial Arts Open held in Singapore |
the year 1995 |
Performed at the 6th Karate, KARATE World Championships in Tokyo |
1998 |
Passed the three-stage exam |
Year 1999 |
Performed at the 7th Karate, KARATE World Championships in Tokyo |
2001 |
Performed at the European Open in Madrid |
Character Evaluation
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John McEnroe: Nobody wants to end up in prison. But if you do end up in prison, Swedish prison's the way to go. It's a lot like living in a very modern home with mid-century finishes.
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Soledad O'Brien: So, Charles, you're now number two in the world. You're favored to win Wimbledon, which would make you number one. How do you do it?
Charles Poole: Yeah, well, when I'm playing I serve the ball and the man opposite me on the other side of the court, he plays it back to me. Now, then I try to hit to a place in the court that he's not standing in anymore. And if he manages to reach that and play it back, if it lands short, I run forward and then I try and get it to another place in the court that he's not standing anymore. And sometimes it goes outside of these lines on the side of the court. And if that happens, the ump, he shouts "Out!" and that's... that's very bad if that happens to me. But if it happens to the other player, I really like that.
Soledad O'Brien: I understand how the game of tennis is played. I guess I meant, what's your overall strategy?
Charles Poole: Yeah, yeah, indubitably, yeah.