Perhaps due to myopia, the 3D picture is always dark, and
even the seat in the center of the universe cannot take care of the entire screen.
For example, when Billy is standing with other teammates, when the cheerleaders are standing in a row,
which one's face is in focus, which one is clear,
theoretically correct, but what if it is 2D? Shouldn't it be the same clarity?
The only thing I think the 3D effect is particularly good is the scene where Billy catches the football.
The film tells the story of a young man named Billy who won the Silver Star medal on the battlefield and his country "needs" him to let him come back and promote him.
Of course his family didn't want him to die, but his girlfriend who fell in love at first sight felt that his return to the battlefield was her real hero.
He learned and got used to speaking the words people wanted to hear.
What I heard, saw, and felt on the court was
all in exchange for my youth, family, and even my life. It seemed like a prosperous world, but the heart was extremely cold.
He could only hide behind the curtain and enjoy the warmth of his girlfriend.
When the proportion of salute tears alone, the cheers of the stadium are in response to such a wonderful current world;
when the stadium manager wants to buy out their team for 5,500 per person,
he fears that fighting on the battlefield is already a gamble. Now, come back and continue to risk? !
Ang Lee is absolutely at hand when dealing with subjects such as characters and families.
"The Wedding Banquet" and "Yiyi", the process of expanding and coping with contradictions, is particularly popular, making
people feel that they are living characters, not the movie itself-isn't it a story?
However, the point of this film is particularly late in the description, and
basically with the final selection of the proportions, the film will come to an end.
If Ang Lee's father trilogy is about boiling water, boiling a pot, and eating,
then this film is like blowing up a balloon, blowing it again, and popping it...
As for the balloon popping, it's the joy of winning the game, or the pursuit of The sadness after the ultimate failure, enjoy it
yourself...
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