In fact, the best shot should be to convey pain. For a large part, I couldn't bear to look closely with my eyes. The large piece of flesh and blood that was cut and pulled down from the leg was cut off and attached to the skin, and the internal organs were severely hit. When the locals came to rescue, she was dragged through weeds, gravel, muddy ground, and a lot of messy branches. She couldn't hold back in the end. When she felt the pain at that moment, she couldn't help but resist the coming of that pain. It's like the stomach and intestines in the stomach are twisted together, trying to spit it out, but can't spit it out.
During the operation, thinking of beautiful things brought her back to the moment when the disaster came, tossing and bumping in the sea, and finally she rushed out of the sea and finally defeated the disaster like a champion.
The heroine and her eldest son both acted very well. The sound effects are also very good. From the perspective of witnessing the disaster from a single person, it is also different from the perspective that disaster films have always focused on the crowd.
View more about
The Impossible reviews