Reason 1: Religious instructions to fool people. Hanks was there alone to analyze according to religious instructions, where did these instructions come from, I don't know, the audience couldn't fully integrate into the film.
Reason 2: Unreasonable movie logic. In the 2nd church, the killer almost killed more than a dozen policemen, but in the 3rd church, Hanks brought 2 policemen to stop the killer. Isn't this hitting the stone with an egg? The killer can't let others know his identity and have seen him in person, but in the end, the killer met Hanks and the heroine, but he showed mercy and said he didn't pay him. Is this person a killer? This movie simply treats attention as an idiot.
Reason 3: There is no suspense. When Hanks rushed in with a gang to save the priest, the priest shouted: "He is the one, he has a gun." Is this line often used by bad guys who frame people? As soon as I heard it, I knew who the real murderer was. The suspenseful atmosphere is rather childish.
The story of this film can be summed up in one sentence: the struggle for power. Just dressed in religious clothes, American professors appear so erudite, but inexplicably erudite; Roman police appear so inept, astonishingly incompetent.
Hanks is old, can he still eat?
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