I don't know if I have grown up. When I walked out of the movie theater this time, I no longer felt cold and helpless. Only the nerves awakened by a few exciting scenes were still trembling slightly. In fact, my ability to perceive helplessness has been declining. In the noisy life after countless trivial invasions, the soul is no longer pure, and the thinking caused by the numbness of things is even more numb.
What impressed me most was the special effects achieved with the technology at the time, and the director's wisdom revealed in some compact plots. If you want to create some unfortunate coincidences and require the audience to sweat, you must connect the two intersecting lines when they are still far apart. At first, it looks a little messy, but it gets closer and closer to the focus. At that time, all the clutter seemed reasonable and meaningful. Just like Hitchcock's theory about bombs, it is even more exciting when the audience knows that there is a bomb that is about to explode. Watching a crisis approach is more appetizing than a crisis.
In short, it is worth seeing.
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