The movie review from a long time ago, put it up.
Years ago, I heard the children in the lab talking about Jackie Chan's new movie. It seems that several are fans of Jackie Chan. However, I'm not a Jackie Chan fan, so I didn't pay much attention. On the first day after the year, they were looking for a new movie on YouTube in the laboratory, and I heard the familiar song "Wei Shan Lake..." to push through the crowd, and I remembered the "Railroad Tigers" on the screen. ", checked on the Internet, it is an adaptation/refurbishment of the "Railway Guerrilla" of the year. "Railway Guerrilla" is a classic for me, a memory of my childhood. I went to the middle school classmates and shouted, thinking that everyone was as excited as me. However, the classmates said that it was an anti-Japanese drama, and it would be disappointing to watch it. There is only one consolation: I remember the complex and taste of my childhood. On Friday morning, I was still not reconciled. After thinking about it, is "Flying Tigers of the Railway" more magical than "The Railway Guerrilla"? Doesn't make sense? After checking, the theaters in the city had a row of "Flying Tigers on the Railway", 6.45pm and 9:45pm. If I can finish my work on time, I'll go and watch a movie at 6:45pm. If you can't finish it, you don't have to watch it later. Fortunately, everything went well. "Flying Tigers on the Railway" just tells the struggle of a group of small people who are not willing to be slaves of the country. I think it is especially in line with the setting of ordinary Chinese people. A group of people who are not very willing to fight, if they can, they just want to live their lives peacefully. But it's not bloodless. It's not that the hatred of the family is not repaid, it just needs an opportunity, an affirmation from others. Foreman Ma Yuan wants to have an order from the injured Eighth Route Army; Boss Fan is going to be turned into a coward by someone he doesn't like... One second he was a submissive slave to the country, but the next second his head fell off. The Scar's Heroes...The Two Sides of Ordinary People... Just like the deputy stationmaster of a station, doing his best to help his compatriots, but in front of his vital interests: hesitation, ego. Selfishness is sometimes not to be blamed. Human nature repeats itself, it is common sense. I think this film has made a good interpretation of Chinese human nature: peaceful, not fighting, but not bloodless. I haven't seen the director/screenwriter of this film before, but I really like his/her interpretation of the little characters. There is nothing lofty, and there is no need to avoid taking every stitch of the masses. The bottom line in my heart is what you and I should have, as a human being, it is enough. Compared with "Railway Guerrilla", this one really can't be called an anti-Japanese drama. There are 3 places in the whole movie that make me very dramatic, Myolie's hairstyle, the Flying Tigers in Little House's mouth, and the last Eighth Route Army. Shouldn't the girl in the Shandong countryside in 1941 have long black hair tied to her waist? Is it because women disguise themselves as men and cut into men's heads? Then why was he molested by the devil as soon as he appeared? It's really inexplicable to dress up as a man and a woman. The brother played by Little House emphasized several times at the end that they were the Flying Tigers. I said, can people who are illiterate really recognize such a profound name? Isn't it just a group of raven cats with long wings? If, if, without the later Eighth Route Army, a group of rabble who got together for an entrustment, and tried their best to serve only one entrustment, how shocking and tragic would it be? Chinese letters are very large. The last is to give this movie a score, complete story, very happy, 7 points. The last scene, when the bridge was blown up, was inexplicably tearful, worth half a point.
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