Let's just talk about the film itself. I guess I have heard a lot of infamy before, so the expectations are not high. I feel that there are quite a lot of places to watch the film. Movies modified from comics are a bit exaggerated, but it is still acceptable. Didn't people in "Dragon Tiger Gate" survive the fight? Some shots are still quite wonderful. Of course, those scenes of blood splashing are too comical, not exciting, and cruel, to reflect the true meaning of hand-to-hand combat in the cold weapon era.
Regarding the core "Wenquan Pass" battle, the director felt too right. Really, please read Wang Shuo's "My Thousand Years Cold" carefully. Not much, just start from the last paragraph on page 13 and end at the second paragraph on page 15. The analysis is too insightful. In ancient times, hundreds of thousands of people were always checking, and there were too many gangsters there. Absolutely the first row was sucked, and there were still 30 miles to chat in the back. There is not so much contact area at all! If there are 500,000 people on both sides, they are all lined up in a long snake formation to oppose each other, then it is possible for everyone to do it one-on-one, but is this possible? Even Ma Dizhi and his like have never made such a low-level mistake. Think of the battle of Fei Shui that year, the former Qin Fujian family dropped over a million and claimed to be a master. His forwards are all on the north bank of Feishui, and the Chinese army is still packing in Chang'an. And there is too much water in this team. At that time, there were only so many households in the country, and China was definitely a populous country in every dynasty. It is said that there are old, weak and sick in the hundreds of thousands of troops. They are not allowed to have female families (of course, we count as male soldiers who are as fierce as Ms. Mulan). Therefore, it’s not an exaggeration to read the history books about who and who led 3,000 elite soldiers to break the enemy’s 200,000 troops. Didn't Leodinas ask his allies in the film? What are you all doing? Carrying big bag, secretary, sculptor. . . Damn, I'm not professional anymore, we have few people here, but all of them are professional killers. Usually when you go to work with a leather bag in your armpit in the morning, we practice swords with your family. Nothing else, that is, physical education, a big sacrifice in one water. In fact, if these 300 people are really blocked in the small gap in the hot spring pass, I guess it will last a while. That kind of hedgehog-like infantry formation should be more than enough to block the corners and hook up a lot of things. Of course, protective fortifications must be added in front. At least there should be a parapet, or it won't be able to stop the first round of the film. After all, there were so many people on the other side. Just lining up, they raised their shields like a bulldozer and pushed 300 of them out of the culvert. In addition, the people of Xerxes were also written too badly, and the elephants couldn't step on them when they were driving rhinos. Obviously the director has an opinion on the Persians. At first glance, I didn't turn around after calling 911. The soldiers of the Persian Empire can be fierce. When Genghis Khan attacked to the west, he was struggling to fight Hualazimo. But where and where in the movie, people in Central Asia are turned into a bunch of bull-headed monsters. They are no longer humans, they are all half-orcs. Several heralds became black. What is the concept of the Persian Empire? It first emerged in the southwestern part of the Iranian Plateau. Cyrus, the first to take the lead, destroyed the Kingdom of Medes and the Kingdom of New Babylon, and gained a firm foothold in Asia Minor. His son Cambyses II even more Conquered Egypt. Later, they had troubles in the country For a while, a priest took the lead in breaking up for several years, and Darius I was born. Became the master of ZTE in Persia (the same meaning as our Emperor Guangwu of Han Dynasty). The Xerxes in the film is the successor of Darius I. Generally called Xerxes I (or Darius II?) in the history books. At this time, the Persian Empire stretched from the Indus River in the east to the coast of Asia Minor in the west, and once occupied parts of Thrace in Europe, and Egypt to the south, forming an unprecedentedly vast slavery empire, including the entire Middle and Near East. More than 200 years later, the Qin State is much larger, the world's first country across three continents (the next one is the Alexander Empire, the Macedonian Empire). You have to look at the map. People in the Persian Empire are basically white skinned, of course there are also black ones. However, I think that tasks such as messengers and ambassadors that show national prestige have been the masters of the spirit throughout the dynasties. Also, if you talk to the enemy in Greece, how can you find reliable oral and listening skills? I personally think that the Persians who engage in Western diplomacy at that time should be white. If you look at Xerxes I again, he is quite tall for others. It has to be 2.1 meters, but it looks like a little one over and over again.
The later lyrical chats in the film are fast-forwarding, and I can't stand it inexplicably. I always feel that the director has begun to instill that American-style freedom and democracy again. . . The Ecstasy Soup. In fact, there is nothing new in the ending point of the main theme of the movie in the United States.
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