Solace Comments

  • Reyes 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    What to do, it's already reached the point where you just look at Uncle Huo's face and think it's Hannibal, no matter who the character is. ....

  • Llewellyn 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    The suspenseful atmosphere in the first half of the rendering is good, and the second half is a bit suspicious. The fascinating "psychic detective" of the old man Hopkins and the integration of religious elements reminded me of "The Seven Deadly Sins" and Liu Qingyun's "The Detective". Of course, this film is obviously not refined and perfect. Is God kind or cruel? Live in pain or die in peace? This is a problem. Of course, Hopkins has finished acting Colin...

  • Zion 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    To be honest, although this movie is a bit boring, do you really think Detective Chinatown is better than...

  • Maeve 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    No wonder the soundtrack is so piercing and discordant, it is really a BT (Brian Transeau) soundtrack that has been in a 10,000-year history. BD 720P...

  • Grady 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    Very general, nothing new, it was actually about euthanasia. . . I don’t feel 囧科 is not suitable for this role. After he came out, he erased the coldness he had portrayed before, and the film turned to clichés. The reason for his death was a bit inexplicable. It seemed that all of this was in my plan. I die, including my own. I'm too tired to work and leave first. ....

  • Mireille 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    I never thought it was a single episode of a medical ethics American drama. Why did it act like a crime-solving film to cheat me out of my ticket? Several turning points are very WTF, and the ending is superfluous to burst. Jeffery Dean Morgan, my goodness! so fucking hot! But there is no use for eggs, because there is Colin Farrell in the...

  • Lilliana 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    5 points. What the hell is this script? It looks like a detective film, but in fact, there is not much to be explored. All the prophets are gone. You don’t know if there is no hair. Watch the two prophets compare who is more awesome. X... …Should we die before the pain comes, or should we struggle to wait for the exhaustion of life, this is the only topic left in this film that is worth recalling, but in fact it is still a topic of euthanasia. It's a little unexpected that the theme of the...

  • Wendy 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    Except for Hopkins's performance, every link is clichéd. Many of the details under those montages are not integrated into the clues, which seems long-winded. The director should have made commercials...

  • Alford 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    The feeling of anticlimactic, the cinema version really has no trace of...

  • Verda 2021-12-27 08:01:12

    Three and a half silent lambs. The thunder and the rain were small until the end was a little rushed. If you find the criminal in a special way, it will be fine. In the end, the old man gave his daughter medicine to death, in fact, it shows that they are all one kind of people. And I have always seen the real murderer appear in the bar, thinking that it was the old man himself killing people with multiple personalities. Of course, many people would have guessed that. 16.1.17 18.2.14 second...

Extended Reading

Solace quotes

  • [first lines]

    Joe Merriwether: [sniffing the cigar] Cuban.

    Agent Katherine Cowles: What's the word, Sawyer?

    Agent Sawyer: Looks like a match.

    Agent Katherine Cowles: [holds up three fingers to Merriwether]

    Agent Sawyer: [on the phone] Yeah, it's Joe. We've got a series. Same M O, same signature, no DNA. Not one goddamn shred.

  • Agent Katherine Cowles: Dr. Clancy, before we go upstairs, with all due respect, I don't hold an ounce of confidence in the paranormal in general. I think it's a sham. I hope that's okay.

    John Clancy: No problem at all. I feel the same about shrinks. After only one thing, your money. Give them your little finger, they'll take your whole hand.

    Agent Katherine Cowles: Whoever said that has obviously never met a good one.

    John Clancy: It was Sigmund Freud.