I must have seen it on TV a few years ago on a jungle-like afternoon, back, gunshots, down, no blood. The charm of westerns lies in this, every time I watch it, it is like looking back on the past.
It was only in the past two years that I really liked the films directed and starred by Kam Toki. The charm of individualism penetrated into the hearts of the audience in the calm eyes and crisp gunshots, like a spray, planting the initial life. Whistles, trumpets, guitars and vocals for erections.
The darts and the Chinese knights have a common expression of justice, but they are different in their bones. Most of the darts see injustice in the road, and I think the knights are more about acting for the heavens. A duel can best see the flavor of the film. There are very few duels in Chinese martial arts films that do not use underhand tricks, and very few do not have the power of "justice" from the sky. What does this mean? At least it can be understood in this way. In the Chinese concept, knights are the incarnation or stand-ins of "justice", but the Western Red Dead are different. They are themselves, and they are individuals. This is the difference between heaven and earth.
So that when I read it, I suddenly thought of the story of the duel of the "heroic" Hamilton, the founding nation of the United States. This is the American version.
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