After watching the whole movie, there was a question mark on his face: Who is Charlie? Where did Charlie come from? Why didn't he have a line for two minutes, and received his lunch without saying a word? Seeing that the director wanted to make James go crazy and sprinkled some mercury as a bedding, but he couldn't use killing Charlie as an inducement. It was too buggy and casual. If it weren’t for the change in the length of the candles that Thomas put out in the chapel at the back, suggesting that Charlie was staying here, I would have thought that this TM was purely a man made out of thin air, but the chapel was clean and clean, and let’s not go far. What did Charlie eat and drink for a few days to survive? OK, that little Charlie was either Pei’s previous life or he ate and drank for several days without being noticed by the three. Then this hidden master ushered in his task after working hard and lurking for several days-the person who was least supposed to be discovered (the least vigilant) when it shouldn't be discovered (the three have just experienced the exhaustion and shake of the battle) Donald from) found it in seconds. As for where Charlie came from: In the film, a total of three ships landed on the island, James and Thomas both knew Charlie, and two pirate (guess) ships were excluded, so Charlie smuggled under the eyes of seven people during the day? Or maybe Charlie has been lurking since the last tower guard? In fact, he is a hidden king (manual dog head). In general, the film is slow, the plot is forced, the logic is full of loopholes, the dialogue is stiff and boring, and two stars are given to the king of Sparta.
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