The immortality flower was finally harvested, and the extract from the flower was tested on the python. The python created in the laboratory is bigger and more ferocious than the wild one, and the rich man who funded the project inadvertently angered the python, making it struggle to break through the sturdy glass cell and escape. After killing several lab workers, the python fled to the countryside, killing a farmer and his livestock before running into the woods. Afterwards, they came to arrest them, and started a bloody fight with the giant python. Several arresters were killed by the python, including the leader. Under the leadership of another person who came later, everyone continued to capture the giant python. The new leader was hired by the rich man and ordered to catch the python alive, not wanting the government to get involved and settle the matter safely. Since then, several people have died from the python. The python also fled into a building. One of the captors opened a bomb when he was dying and died with the python. Another captor is going to blow up the building with bombs to kill the small pythons that the giant pythons give birth to. They are killed by the leader and the heroine is captured. The heroine struggled to escape and bombed the building, killing the leader as well. But a small python was caught by one person and sent to the rich man.
This is the third instalment in the series, and it's turned into a low-budget monster movie that isn't very lifelike by Python. Different from the previous two, the tail of the giant python evolved into a sharp knife, and several captors were killed by its tail piercing the chest.
This film, like other low-budget horror films, produced a lot of mutilated corpses and blood all over the floor to render the horror effect. As a small-budget film, this is okay, although there is a big gap compared to the previous two films, but it is enough to pass the time.
There is a scene at the end of the film where the heroine walks forward calmly and calmly, with an explosion behind and the fire blazing into the sky. This scene has been used in many films before, and it is too cliché. Still don't have to.
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