After watching Good Omens after lunch, I felt that the character setting is very good, but the plot is too shallow, and some parts are procrastinated and some places are unclear. Therefore, the overall evaluation is 4 stars.
Let me tell you what I like:
- Crowley's character. Although it is a demon, I don't think it's bad at all. He walks irritably, likes rock and roll, and his Bentley is always playing Queen (I also like it so much, every time it sounds cool), I guess only Aziraphale ("6,000-year-old best friend") is in my heart, just as greedy as Azi. Life is very tinged with fireworks. Intimidate plants and cars, do things for Azi that the "angels" don't want to do, from cleaning stains on clothes to killing people, always love Azi.
- Friends of Crowley and Aziraphale? friendship? An angel and a demon should never have a friendship. But they have become human. For 6,000 years, the body has also "dusted" the soul. The bond between the two is too deep. The Garden of Eden, Noah's Ark, Rome, Shakespeare, the French Revolution, and World War II, along the way, Azi finally "fallen" . But Azi hid something from Crow after he got the prophecy, which I'm very puzzled about. When Crow was rejected by Azi in the pavilion, and Crow felt sad and angry when he found out that Azi was out of shape, it made me feel that the demon gave more in this relationship, and was more attentive, and Azi was more like a protected object. Not quite.
- Aziraphale's friendly heavenly forces are nothing but hypocrisy. The angel group longs for war and victory. Azi has no feelings for God's flooding to drown the people of the western world, but at the end of the world, he stands up to save the world. He hadn't spoken swear words in six thousand years, but in the end he couldn't help it.
Dislikes:
- Parsifah's appearance was abrupt. The front is the story of Crow and Azi. As a result, it feels a bit stiff to switch. The story here is far less interesting than before. I think it would be nice if we could focus on the two angels or start off with a multi-line production of group portraits.
- Too many characters, too little time.
- Awesome coaxing the Four Horsemen to give away the head casually? What is a flaming sword?
- The wonderful fate of Parsifa and witch.
There are also a lot of easter eggs like "Another One Bites the Dust" when the telemarketer fails.
I watched Neil Gaiman's "American Gods" before and thought it was a good idea, but the plot development was a bit strange.
After listening to queen and writing these thoughts, the final song is "Bicycle bicycle bicycle I want to ride my bicycle", which is good.
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