Soon after the change, I felt excited and felt some memories of the original owner of the body.
I went to this movie with great enthusiasm, but after watching it for 20 minutes, I was on pins and needles. After watching it for an hour, I couldn't bear it any longer.
The male protagonist unexpectedly discovered that this body was not a cultivated body like the doctor at the institute said, but a young soldier who was willing to sell his body for money for his daughter's body.
It got out of hand after that.
While blaming the doctor at the research institute for contempt of human life, the male protagonist kills all kinds of people and shows no mercy to the men of the research institute doctor.
Here I am reminded of some kind of moral bitch, who is a bitch/smashing, and has to set up a torii to show his innocence.
He has repeatedly stated that he has a bottom line in being a human being. I always believed it, but when I saw the doctor killed by him, I suddenly felt that this villain was a little baffling.
No matter whether the doctor despised life and used money to buy people's bodies to do evil research, he always saved the male lead's life.
If the male protagonist can become such a rich man, can he really not understand the connection? What's more, when he killed the doctor, he never thought that the original soul in the doctor's body might be revived?
In the end, I can only say that soldiers are the winners in life.
I got a lot of money, my wife came back, my body came back, and my daughter got better.
In other words, this movie is about an old hero who saved a certain family, hiding his merit and fame. I seem to feel that the red scarf on his chest is more vivid.
Originally, this kind of plot is a great theme, but unfortunately the director wants to talk Love and morality, trying to express all kinds of the Holy Father, but it made me feel bad for my two movie tickets.
There is a reason why the box office is so bad. . .
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