To be honest, I have no impression or liking for Stallone at all. His slightly crooked mouth and uncorrected facial features often make me want to change the stage when I see his movies. Even if I restrain the impulse, I will He would be impatient again because of his pitiful lines, as if speaking with a braised egg. So, I barely watched the first three episodes of First Blood.
Compared with my lack of interest, the male friends around me are enthusiastic and say that they want to see "the last drop of the old man". To be honest, I don't know whether it's mostly joking or admiration for such remarks. A friend of about 50 said, "If only I had a body like his when I was 60." Indeed, apart from the corners of Stallone's sagging mouth, his body was probably One of the few eye-catching focal points of the film!
About the plot of the movie, I think many people have mentioned it, so I will not describe it here. It's just that I don't know whether such a film is good-looking, with a simple and easy-to-guess storyline, and a bloody and shredded war scene. Is this an anti-war or a celebration of the beauty of war?
In the whole film, apart from the real shudder, I can't seem to find too much moving, and Lan Bo's inner drama really didn't arouse too many emotional fluctuations in me, maybe because I didn't watch the first few episodes, Naturally, he could not understand the struggle and pain in his heart.
Many times, when we want to change ourselves, we often find our true self at a certain moment. The same is true for Lanbo. He hid in Myanmar for so long, but he changed himself for one sentence. Perhaps, this was his destiny, or maybe it was God's arrangement. If he hadn't experienced this, I think he would have Die old in Myanmar!
If there is anything that shocks me about this movie, I think it's the heroine's boyfriend (forgive me for forgetting his name). From the very beginning, he severely condemned Rambo's violent behavior to the end, he himself picked up the big stone on the side to survive, beat the Burmese army to death, and finally left with an expression of panic and disbelief. His expression of struggle and pain is probably the best part of the film's acting.
Sometimes what we think is wrong turns out to be life-saving. I asked myself, when the dilemma of killing and being killed is presented to me, should I, like him, abandon my beliefs! It's ironic that what you thought was wrong saved yourself at the last minute. Although this is a work that condemns the brutality and inhumanity of the Burmese army, it ironically chose to use violence to suppress violence.
Perhaps, we are all looking for a path, a principle that we stick to. But I don't know that such beliefs are often destroyed in an instant.
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