1. Your English is too bad, and the Chinese subtitles you read cannot understand how grass-roots and how real their language is. It's easy to forget that it was deliberately performed because there was no artistic touch up.
2. You're not used to the way Home Video shoots, it's been rampant after 10 years. Camera shake is not a problem, the key is to shake the camera reasonably. For example, things like Lou Ye that are easy to sway in literary films should be less used to fool the audience and embarrass them. This kind of thriller is the most suitable for Akira, because he wants to bring you closer - don't you think that this kind of narration without a third party makes you feel that you are not watching a movie, but watching it yourself Is that the real video tape that people picked up a year later? After watching this film, I greatly regret that I praised the Hollywood blockbuster "Cloverfield" before, which turned out to be not innovative. Hollywood, I feel sorry for you.
3. You expect to see gory and horrific footage like 10,000 commercials. If so, why do you watch independent films? I think the best thing about this movie is that it doesn't have a single horror scene throughout. Is there any movie where putting a pile of rocks makes you feel sulky? And it's still an old-fashioned subject like witches? But just because he is not out of line, it makes people feel more real and more likely to happen to him. My favorite is the film that takes the psychological route. This film can be said to be the most engaging film out of all the thrillers I've seen in recent years. The incisive back of that ending flashed by, but it left me uneasy for a long time. A few days after watching a horror movie, I still think back to my fears, except for "Midnight Bell".
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