I have been so speechless about this series so far, so much so that the traditional American bloody taste of the fourth episode can even make people's eyes shine.
After watching the fourth episode, I finally didn't have the feeling that every previous episode made people feel that 40 minutes of life was wasted (referring to the plot is anticlimactic and the proportion is sloppy), and the advantages and disadvantages are quite obvious, especially the part that sells rot in the middle. It's really to cater to some people who don't need to watch it at all.
This section is also good. The person responsible for shooting and editing behind the scenes is also the person who really has the ability to make the show better. But it seems that he is the most rational and bottom-line person among the four. In fact, he can also agree to hand over the suicide video for traffic; obviously he doesn't seem to care about five million fans, and he also faces when three people cheer five million. Lu Nanse thought it was wrong, but when he saw five million fans, he shouted "Christmas miracle" without fear of death. There is no bottom line for traffic. If everyone in the Brothers House can live to see their five million fans, I'm afraid they won't have to. Thanks to this Santa for making their deaths limited by time, many characters did not dig deeper, such as the black brother who expressed "extreme excitement" about selling rot, the decision-making and importance of the people behind the team, the cat-and-mouse game The confrontation can also be shot a little more excitingly, the black brother died too perfunctory
However, there is no need to dig too much in this series, it is nothing more than a bad drama that uses gimmicks and some horror ideas to attract the audience, but the screenwriter and director of this episode are at least responsible for their own work. (It's you Murphy and Sister Jiao who are scolding you) The "Christmas tree" that was fixed in the house at the end is also very good, and it finally brings some dignity to this American comedy warm story.
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