The sound of the gunfire was so real that it terrified me; the blood from the broken hand was so real that at one point it made me turn off the movie and wait for a while before continuing to watch it. But I don't buy into the so-called American heroism promoted in this film. When I heard the stationmaster get on the plane and say to the protagonist, "I'm proud of an American like you", I only had one word in my mind, "Bah!!!", are you embarrassed? You Americans are hypocritical when 4 people die, but have you ever seen a crying mother squatting beside every corpse outside the fence? Libya, which was originally run by the government, has since fallen into the clutches of ISIS? Before going out, the male protagonist said to Amur: "Your country has to deal with this mess by itself, Amur." I think this is the mentality of the United States, making a mess in other people's homes, and then leaving a sentence, I'm sorry, I have something to do first. Go, at this moment there are 10,000 fucking horses running through my heart.
When the idea and theme of a movie do not follow your heart at all, the process of watching a movie becomes a process of finding faults, but from the perspective of movie technology, it is still more interesting than the popcorn movie "The White House Has Fallen" and the like. Yes, there's not much more to say than that.
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