The rating is only for the sensory satisfaction provided by this film, and since I have a fairly clear functional need for it, the plot aspect is not required.
This is the highest quality plasma tablet I have seen in recent years. The quality here refers to the quality of the blood plasma, and the second is the structure of the entire story without careful consideration of the plot. The progress is basically balanced, and every scene in each stage has developed what I predicted and expected to see.
Since that tragic night, the car of the story has been driven out. In fact, I feel that the owner of the gas station is not necessarily the original owner. During the period, he hijacked the car and collected money to deliver food to the mutants. He planned to take the opportunity to leave here, but the car was sneaked into the gas station and surrounded by it. suicide.
The favorite stage of the whole film is that the son-in-law walks down the mine into the mutant town. The hesitation of the staged regrouping and the tension of the killing blow are perfectly blended in the atmosphere. The daily life faked by the models everywhere, this calm and strange atmosphere is very atmospheric, but it may also be that adults want to let those mutated children see normal. The daily life built by the world is somewhat emotional.
I won't go into details about the plasma part. If you only pursue this, there will be climaxes everywhere from forty to fifty minutes. The only advice to the villains is to not just put the ingredients alive in the unplugged freezer for freshness. If the son-in-law was washed, dismantled and cut before being locked in, the people in this truck would probably be able to eat for many days in the whole village.
View more about The Hills Have Eyes reviews