First of all, this is a very DC-quality movie.
Whether it is the breaking point at the beginning (the sacrifice of the real man version of the clown) or the smooth movements that carry out the whole film, it can be regarded as a masterpiece. The film focuses on different parallel earths, the change and intersection of good and evil characters, taking into account the weaknesses and brilliance of human nature, and introducing the concept of time and space, making it more advanced. The story tells the dual lines of good and evil at the same time, and gradually understands the structure, interpersonal, desire and worldview of the criminal alliance in the opposition.
The core of the story, the concept of two earths, is both plausible and surprising. The wave of operations of Luther and the Joker that appeared at the beginning is very immersive. There is also some tearjerker in the reversal of surprise. Before I knew it, I began to care about the fate of Earth 3.
The plot unfolded slowly as Luthor came to the main world Earth. Different world, different character destiny. Here Luthor sees the possibility of saving the world, but the heroes are not young men with blood. They also had their hesitations and discussions when they heard that Crisis was in an alternate world (Batman even refused to go there).
But in the end, their inner sense of justice and responsibility still drove them to a strange earth to realize the value of the Justice League. Heroes who have always been invincible take a hit here, and they seem to lack some power in the first fight compared to their replacement opponents. (This is the legendary blackening is twice as strong, and whitewashing is weaker by three points.) I really don't understand how Luther and the others persisted. When the real superheroes came, they were all beaten to shit. And this Earth No. 3 is not quite right. It can actually create "artificial people" by passing superpowers to others. These "artificial people" are obviously stronger. All I can say is, Luther, Joker, it's hard for you. (Could it be that there are only Luther and the Joker, because the two-faced people were all killed?) It can only be said that World No. 3 is a wonderful world. Wonder Woman who looks like Mulan, Vixen who dresses like a fur dealer, Green Arrow who looks like Robin Hood, Supergirl who shows violence and kisses, looks like a 50-year-old Green Lantern and… The owl man………… Such a luxurious lineup, you wait for a rookie to bow down. Within the crime alliance, differences still exist, and at a time when other villains are greedy for power, the Batman of World 3, the Owl Man. Still has a distinctive character. This guy is pure terrorist! The master of this world has really let go of himself! It's fine if you make your own mistakes and correct them yourself. What do you care about other people's mistakes? If you correct your mistakes, you will have to start from the root cause step by step. Well, I can only say that it is you. The whole film is full of tears and thought-provoking points. Very top. (Luthor says "Sorry, Harley. The Joker won't be back." to the little monkey version of Harley Quinn.) (The Martian-Earthian love story—a love that crosses races, bah, love that crosses planets.) . But, the problem still exists. When the villains are so powerful, why does the world government still exist without doing anything? Do nuclear bombs really work? Dare to use?
Another world Martian actually started a lunch box... Is it to balance the strength?
Why were Luther and the Joker able to steal the quantum detonator from such a powerful adversary with only two people? A bomb that can blow up the earth, the government actually let them make it? ! You can, Luther, you can build a dimensional shuttle. You can do it, Owl Man, you can improve it as soon as they make a dimensional shuttle. The strength of Batman in the two worlds is too different. Why does Owlman feel like hitting his brother when he beat Batman? For the first time, I felt that Batman's suit didn't seem to be so awesome. It was handsome but it was too brittle. (Could this be pragmatism's beating of bells and whistles?) Finally, a tribute to the heroic Johnny Quick, who, no matter what he was before, knew he couldn't do it, you were a hero. (Even another world can't change The Flash's funny attributes.)
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