Several years ago, I saw the name of Lu Gang, a Chinese student, for the first time in "Zheng Yuanjie's Dialogue". A few years later, when I watched this small-budget film made in the United States, I remembered Zheng Yuanjie's conclusion at that time: This is a typical failure case of China's examination-oriented education. Is it really so?
The madness and agitation in Liu Ye's performance can break people's stereotypes about young Chinese actors, even American ones. There is always a trace of unease in his body, which makes people wonder what he will do next.
It seems that a terrifying ending is inevitable. The Chinese singing in the film is a pure singing taste, which makes people shudder.
A few years ago, I read a reportage about the Lu Gang incident, many of which could not be shown in a movie. But just an hour and a half movie is enough to make people feel heavy. Although the excavation of Liu Xing (Lu Gang)'s character is not deep enough, the general taste is still correct.
Some people say that only 1% of all people are geniuses. But I think that maybe 99% of geniuses will be destroyed if they don't become geniuses, and there are many ways to destroy them. I don't know if the Lu Gang incident (I'm about to automatically replace it with "Liu Xing") will become the subconscious of that generation of international students. Cultural estrangement may have different manifestations in different backgrounds, not as simple as binary opposition. Matter and Void? Matter vs Antimatter? Or Matter or Dark Matter?
View more about Dark Matter reviews