The emotional scene at the end turned to a female college student who was going to hook up for the upper position, and then threatened the murdered female college student Ma Lin, and threw the two uncles aside. What kind of rhythm is this, it is strange, and it has no resonance at all. Maureen's actual number of appearances was only about five times, and the death incident was simply sketched out. In the first half of the story, there are two characters, Vince and Neal, and the director seems to have dragged the end of the story to Maureen in order to resonate with the name of the film. One line of the story is the present time and space where the female reporter reveals the truth, and the other is the past time and space of Neal's notes. The transition of the series is uncomfortable. Did the director deliberately use two blonde girls to bring these two time and space together? What is more sensible is the relationship between the two uncles. Neil's notes connect the two of them now. They have been brewing for so long in the front, but they have been taken away in the back. I don't like the practice of Neal's assistant directly telling the truth. It seems to create some hazy emotions between the uncles, but in fact, it is more like being dragged directly under the sun to be scorched. The plot structure is unified, but the proposition is not unified, and it is not clear which one is the main one. In the end, the heroine felt the same as the heroine of the crack, and they were all eaten by the camera.
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