Only when I saw it did I realize that Jessica's recent cute heroine's hairstyle that is different from the Fantastic Four is more to my liking.
To be honest, it really doesn't feel dramatic.
However, the whole play is closely related to the theme of the machete and likes to use a knife to solve it everywhere.
In the beginning, Scimitar's wife died without saying what happened to her daughter, and it passed like this. The later plot is also very clear, except that the blood splashed when the shot was particularly exaggerated and eye-catching, I really didn't think it was very interesting.
The version I've seen seems to be abridged.
A team of twin nurses and a team of twin female gunmen. It seems that the director likes the pairing (?) of two women together.
A boring dialogue about intestines in the hospital turns out to be a scene where a machete pulls someone else's intestines and jumps off a building. But the intestines can really be 16 meters? And won't it break if pulled by a man that heavy and jumping off the building? Really can't understand the significance of this scene.
It's hot under the bed at "she"'s house, otherwise the eggs can be fried. When the last "she" appeared, bra, low-waisted pants and blindfolds were really sexy female warriors.
Almost the setting of the movie is that the female character likes the male character. Jessica was really cute when she woke up on the set and confirmed that she had not done it with the machete and wanted to rub her face.
The ending really hurts me, why do I need to kiss to end it! I just like handsome guys and beauties. Of course I am Yan control. This also hit me too hard.
Everyone died so ridiculously, the guy who got stabbed with a machete, I really don't understand why he had to make the wound worse himself. The Japanese woman next to him is also nonsensical and has no lines. Even if the man dies in the end, he just leaves!
The senator was killed by his own grid system.
Actually, it really doesn't feel like a good movie.
Blood flowers and gunfights are also reluctant.
Was too expecting.
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