Middle Men Comments

  • Amy 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    Huangban social network, the online version of Boogie Night, is really good and...

  • Isabel 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The R-rated "social network" is an alternative entrepreneurial story that captures business opportunities in a flash. A pornographic Internet business has attracted excessive attention from gangsters and the FBI. It seems to be an adaptation of a real event. I really admire how Laomei has so many...

  • Elza 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    It's not really a porn...

  • Summer 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The film tells us how dangerous it is to have pig-like PARTNERS, and we still have to rely on ourselves at critical moments. Secondly, there is no need to elaborate on how developed the porn industry is, but it is worth exploring behind the formation of its industrial...

  • Miles 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    Those paid porn sites in the United States and Japan are all good money! How many! Cracking down on child pornography while adult pornography is rampant is the right way to do...

  • Yasmin 2022-03-19 09:01:06

    The inner world of the screenwriter. So we must choose partners...

  • Jacklyn 2022-03-19 09:01:06

    Social network? ? ? Adult network? ?...

  • Easton 2022-03-18 09:01:05

    The part of the terrorist in the love narration movie is really cute. I still don’t understand what face is there when a woman takes the money that a man makes, no matter how he spends it, she has to blame her own man for rejecting a pig-like...

  • Katlyn 2022-03-18 09:01:05

    Can it be regarded as a popular science...

  • Luigi 2022-03-17 09:01:06

    The emotional conflict part occupies too many scenes, which dilutes the historical part of the...

Extended Reading

Middle Men quotes

  • Audrey Dawns: I think there's just too much emphasis on guilt. All this guilt, guilt, guilt. Guilt for what? I'll bet if you ask any old timer in one of those old folks homes, they'd tell you they regret the stuff they didn't do. Not the stuff that they did do.

  • Curt Allmans: Get out. Now. Yesterday, if possible.