The female protagonist doesn't have to look pretty, so how can the male protagonist who is a vampire not be pretty? Think of Tom Cruise back then. He was really amazing as a vampire, with a noble and evil taste. It made people feel that it was willing to be bitten by him, and he was willing to fall into the dark world with him. However, the hero of "Twilight" is so ordinary, is it a vampire to brush his face a little bit white? Even the color of the eyes is not pretty, brown...
There are several vampires in the play, and none of them are very pretty. And from the beginning to the end, even when biting someone, he didn't show his fangs. The eyes didn't turn red, and the nails didn't grow longer. It looked like an ordinary person was biting with his mouth open—no beauty. The cold and dark charm of the blood race did not show up at all. At most, it shows speed and strength-running at high speed and pushing the car with one hand. But the look of the male lead climbing the tree with the female lead on his back is ridiculous. Shouldn't vampires fly up gracefully and handsomely? Why do they want to climb like a monkey... The
most thrilling part is that the male protagonist runs under the sun to show the female protagonist his changes. I thought how he was going to transform, The result is that the skin looks a little golden in the sun. After seeing it, the hostess was shocked: it's so beautiful, like a diamond... The host said sadly to the hostess that this is the skin of a murderer... But he also said that his family are all vegetarians and do not drink human blood. Drink animal blood. Then the heroes and heroines laugh and run in the woods-I think this kind of bridge can be found in very old-fashioned romance dramas. Then the female lead slowly lay down on the grass, staring at the male lead, and then the male lead slowly lay down on the grass beside the female lead... It seems that I haven’t seen such an innocent scene in N years, generally this In this case, the male protagonist was overwhelmed and started the kiss scene, but the male and female protagonists in the play just lay side by side and looked at each other affectionately... It's so innocent, and the innocence thundered me...
The first half of the play is basically a relationship or a campus relationship, and the second half is a climax when a vampire is chasing and drinking the heroine's blood. This climax is really perfunctory. Seven vampires hit two, and he bit the heroine and almost limped the heroine. The female protagonist was bitten, she should have become a vampire. The female protagonist herself is also very willing. The male protagonist must not take drugs for her, so that she can still be a human... In this drama, she only needs to suck it out after being bitten by a vampire. Even if the poisonous blood is all right, it makes the vampire look like a poisonous snake. It has fangs, releases the venom, and sucks the venom. Everything is fine... After the
vampire movie is destroyed, it is basically over. Romance, the heroine said that he wanted to join and become a vampire, but the hero refused again-really tossing, why did you say he refused to let the heroine become a vampire? I have to endure so much that I want to suck her blood but can't suck it, I can't make love, it seems that I want to suck blood on impulse-is the male protagonist a masochistic? And human beings will get old and die soon, won't he be alone again by then?
There seems to be a sequel to this movie. There are three thick books. I flipped through the third one, and it all reached the third one. The heroine is still a human being. Does the author just want the fragile human heroine to continue to encounter danger, and then let the tragic heroine run around to rescue?
Anyway, I won't be fooled anymore. It doesn't matter to me no matter how much toss.
Fortunately, I didn't buy those three books before.
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