rightly wrong

Lesly 2022-03-16 09:01:02

I thought this was "After Turning Off the Lights", but when I opened it, I realized that the style of the painting was wrong. But obsessive-compulsive disorder is to read the beginning and have to finish it! I think I saw the trailer of "Accounting Assassin", but I didn't have the desire to watch it at all. There is no way to hide.

Originally, black women would be female protagonists, and would have interracial black and white love with the male protagonist. Because of their different positions, there would be life and death choices, love and hate. Unexpectedly, there will be another white heroine, and then the love between the hero and the hero is inexplicable and inexplicable.

Brotherhood is the most abrupt.

Childhood past events are a necessary foreshadowing of why today's characters have become like this, but the male protagonist's struggles are not as good as his childhood.

Bin Aihua. "Pearl Harbor" didn't become another "Titanic" that year, and he didn't become another little plum. This is life.

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Extended Reading
  • Reid 2022-03-24 09:01:22

    Three and a half. I didn't expect that the director could even block his brothers with this.

  • Viviane 2022-03-23 09:01:23

    What the hell is the Chinese translation! Why not call it "Accountant Man"! Daben plays the true face of facial paralysis. I quite like this multi-line structure. It's just that the weight of the cold joke is not enough. There is also the heroine's too good-looking girl next door, who is too unsuitable for Big Ben, and the relationship line is barely. It is expected to be made into a series.

The Accountant quotes

  • Christian Wolff: Solomon Grundy, Born on a Monday, Christened on Tuesday, Married on Wednesday, Took ill on Thursday, Grew worse on Friday, Died on Saturday, Buried on Sunday. That was the end, Of Solomon Grundy.

  • Ed Chilton: Now, Mr. Wolff, I half suspect we're wasting your time.

    Christian Wolff: I'm quite sure you're not.

    Ed Chilton: And you know this how?

    Christian Wolff: I'm on the clock.

    Ed Chilton: [Small laugh] Well, I hope we're not wasting ours, then. Look, kidding aside, I think if you saw our books you'd run for the hills. We have an incredibly complicated accounting system. Depreciation schedules on hundreds of different items. Full-time and contract employees. Department of Defense classified accounts. It's a numerical nightmare.

    Christian Wolff: I'll need to see all those books for the past ten years. Bank statements, complete list of clients and vendors. Hard copies printed out, my eyes only. All the information's right here.

    [Slides over folded paper]

    Ed Chilton: Okay, well, well, look. This all came to my attention only last week. Now, a junior cost accountant stuck her nose where it didn't belong and obviously had no idea what she was looking at. Lamar is overreacting. There's no missing money.

    Christian Wolff: How long have you been CFO of this company, sir?

    Ed Chilton: Fifteen years.

    Christian Wolff: I need the books for the past fifteen, please.

    Ed Chilton: Well you're awful goddamn blunt!