I thought it would all come out at the end. The whole story is a game of the black Harvey Bu, because in the first scene, the hero goes ghost and sells books, and Harvey in the corner appears in the camera, and it was later discovered that it was Harvey's subordinate A group of gangsters, and more importantly, the heroine. In the plot, the heroine also found a little detail about the hero Sean on Ask, revealing a little bit of Sean's relationship with boxing. In the end, it will be a game, and Sean will naturally become a pawn in Harvey's entire chess game. Trust, affection and strong body are all used to the extreme, and finally the contradiction turns to the theme of Trust and Love, which is an American old-fashioned tune. But it seems that the screenwriter didn't think so much, just simply let the protagonist kill the evil big boss hastily. I don't know what story the writer wants to tell in the end, or what the director wants us to see. To put it simply, it was a homeless man who fought three wild fights with women in order to live, and finally won the last one with strength, winning 20 million.
View more about
Fighting reviews