click on it. It looks like a film from a long time ago, but Shaw Pictures still read it from right to left. The black and white bride makes blood and violence less glaring. The song slowly sung is really nice, long and sad. No gun is needed for Revenge, so this is an authentic action movie. The two women are also mothers, and you suddenly become friends. With such a pretense, how to continue if the ending is tragic. Their negotiations are reminiscent of the martial arts world in our country-find a place to fight, hey, this is... oops, a terrifying sound! It's death anyway, what about so many words before? Modern martial arts drama, where did modern capture go?
Want to know that so many sunglasses are used to show off wealth?
Wow, cowboy movie!
I still wear the same shoes four years later, how much I love it. . . .
Obviously it was a murder, and with such a cheerful whistle, the director was perverted.
It's a strange style of painting to see them torturing, but saying that they don't engage in secret killings.
Is there a metaphor for high-definition mosquitoes sucking blood?
I guess this is an organization.
Cuncui looking for torture movies, violent, don’t watch what you haven’t watched, and
there are still animations indiscriminately. What the hell is this! !
This is a very bloody film, once again warn, no resistance or children should not enter! Killing is using a cheerful style of music that will definitely confuse the outlook on life.
Zuishengmengsi, crooked calligraphy, killing Bill like this hodgepodge.
Japanese samurai sword, kill harm? Haha
, it’s a knife, not a person. It’s a knife. There is also the ridiculous
gang fight. The fake black and white can't cover up the slaughter.
Killing a snake. Killing Bill. Take a
picture of the fat plane swinging in the blood red, I drive my feet, it is a toy plane, what do you think?
What's the meaning? Just play like this? daughter? After the filming, Bill is still alive, so what a mystery. .
So, this is a super bloody commercial, selling knives.
View more about Kill Bill: Vol. 1 reviews