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I hate killing enemies without picking up guns
Bernhard 2022-01-22 08:02:08
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Daniela 2022-03-25 09:01:20
Barely two points. The overall temperament of this film is very similar to the Clover series, closely following the heroine's long-handed long shots (the first half-hour long shots have at least three or four editing points), sudden intervention and unknown street melee incidents, but here There are no aliens. The background is that Texas, which wants to be independent, sends mercenaries to try to control the Bushwick district of New York. As a result, they encounter unexpected resistance from local residents. As a result, the whole film is in the perspective of lack of information. Batista's escape route tells a strange story with no beginning and no end. The main line is basically the protagonist trio running around in the mixed station of mercenaries and residents. The passers-by they meet during the run have no functional thematic structure, and the melee scenes are limited to the cost. (mainly by the smoke to set off), there seems to be a psychological healing motive for terrorist attacks outside the main line, but the way it is expressed is to let Batista sit there and tell the story, but his acting skills can't hold up. What prejudice might this film have against the media? In this level of attack, the media and the US government are almost invisible throughout
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Orland 2022-03-23 09:03:13
Too many politically correct memes! The action scenes seem to be lively, but they are actually illogical!
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Belinda: [on the domestic insurgency] It's another fucking civil war
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Lt. Brewer, Lt. Quaid: [on why he's part of the invasion] Texas is superseding from the rest of the country