One scene, a few tables and chairs, and a dozen actors, you'd be hard-pressed to find a movie with fewer scenes, fewer props, and fewer actors (forgive my ignorance, "Night Club" barely counts as one). Can a good movie be made with such a small investment? Yes, because a good movie is not necessarily created by Brother Kong Fang. If you invest enough in other aspects, you can also make a good movie.
Here's a quote from "Cooking Theory". As the experts say, doing a TV show and making a movie is like cooking. To make a delicious dish, sometimes you need some good ingredients, such as mountain and sea delicacies, and then a little processing is a delicious dish. If you are a rich second generation, this should be your choice; and sometimes, we only have salty Fish and cabbage, it needs to be carefully cooked in order to cook a satisfying dish. So it's the same with making movies. If you want to have a good production, and you don't have enough money to support you to do those gorgeous special effects, then you have to put in a little more intelligence. That is to say, if you can't spend hundreds of millions on post-production like Cameron Anthony, then you have to be honest and work on the plot like Katherine Bigelow.
Back to The Ultimate Interview. In my opinion, the ultimate in The Ultimate Interview is not its difficulty, but the number of people participating in the interview. Because, when we finished listening to the questions asked by the proctor, everyone in the audience became a candidate, and everyone wanted to find the question and solve it. It is conservatively estimated that people who have seen this movie will be in the eight figures. So, an interview for an eight-figure candidate is, I guess, the ultimate in numbers alone.
Why is this a good movie, because it's captivating, it makes you eager to know the outcome and at the same time guides you to find it, the director succeeds in extending the suspense from the beginning to the end of the story... In fact, instead of To say it's a movie is to say it's a secret room survival game. So, in fact, you are playing a game and not watching a movie, and we know that the sense of participation in the game is unmatched by the movie. No matter how shocking a movie is, it cannot be as memorable as a thrilling game.
So the success of The Ultimate Interview is that it makes you feel like you're playing a 96-minute game. However, it is a bit unkind to play a secret room survival game here. The secret room survival game does not challenge our IQ, but our self-confidence. It plays with psychology rather than intelligence. And playing psychology, in fact, can be very perverted...
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