After returning from Angkor Wat, I saw the entanglement between ancient tombs and ancient temples in Tabulao, and I drank the cocktail said to be personally brewed by Angelina Jolie at Hongqin Restaurant, and I especially wanted to revisit "Tomb Raider".
But other than that, the movie is really lackluster. The plot and the relationship between characters are illogical. The treasures that took a long time to find will eventually be destroyed, and the inexplicable old lover's relationship between them has not been explained. After the villain died, all his subordinates were withdrawn?
Like the second part, the whole chapter is full of strong American conceit and narcissism, robbing, smashing, and destroying graves on other countries’ sites, making them look like adventurers. The people in those places still work as coolies. Help them destroy their own temple together, and cheer together when the destruction is successful? It is simply outrageous. The protector gods in the temple are full of mythical colors. Their fighting power is slag, and they will be smashed into slag when they are beaten casually. Whether it is Shanghai in the ancient market of China in the second part, peasant women in mountain villages, living on dilapidated boats. Fishermen, tribal primitive people in Africa, and the coolies, massagers, eminent monks, people on the water, old men in Siberia, and little girls who warn people in Cambodia in the first part are all full of kindness and help to these people who come to destroy. This is probably what other countries should look like in the eyes of Americans, backward, mysterious, can be driven at will, without dissatisfaction but willingly. The history and culture of these countries only provide a background for curiosity, like a playground, it is what they imagined in their own minds, and they do not need to be deeply understood, because a legendary treasure went to other people's countries and got it. A bunch of destruction, ruining a bunch of monuments, and then saying that it is to save human beings, this world view is also drunk. [
View more about Lara Croft: Tomb Raider reviews