I originally
watched the movie at Lao Bu. I thought there would be some action movies. At the beginning of the movie, I saw Lao Bu and rolled around.
I said, Lao Bu, you have been too fierce in the past few years. It’s
fine if you don’t have an expression on your face. Your body is always full of silicone,
so those martial arts movements follow the petrification in this way.
fall!
There is no compact action as expected, and science fiction is even less reliable.
(The movie budget may be cut in half...) The
plot is boring. . . . Hey, let's eat popcorn, it's crunchy!
If I had to squeeze out a little bit, it would be brainstorming. It
probably reminded me of the 2005 "Escape from the Clone Island". "The Island" is
a "living organ storage center". The
plot is actually no different. Vice provides humans with complete exemption. Amusement resort center,
in this well-designed and controlled resort center,
all visitors can do whatever they want, kill, chop, beat, and fuck. . . .
All the "residents" inside are human skin robots, with no memory and no motives,
just robots that are constantly being recycled, repaired, and refilled with memories,
satisfying all the "beasts" of all visitors.
The residents in The Island even talked about it.
The clone was completely taken from the contractor’s DNA regeneration.
As long as the contractor was physically injured, his clone would have to be like an organ access center.
What is lacking, and what to make up for, is completely self-sufficient. Regeneration, no rejection, no need to wait for organ donation. . .
If the signatory wants to have a child, her clone's child can almost squash.
The story of Vice is like "Purgatory Playground on Earth",
The Island is the "Organ Access Center".
But they are all exactly the same pattern: the
prisoner ran away, and the administrator was like a hunter chasing and killing rabbits with bullets flying in the sky.
Finally, because of the inherent "humane spirit" of American movies,
there must be a just explanation that
the white mice in the laboratory should be returned to the animals. Human Rights Management Center. . . .
At the end of Vice's drama, the old cloth is
not looking at him. It seems that my goose bumps are recurring and regenerating. This is the foreshadowing of the second episode of the bad film. It is better to watch the Hong Kong zombie film that makes people feel a little popular.
I'm definitely not going to watch the second episode again.
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