Even though I had watched the already very heavy promo the day before, when I arrived at the theater, I was still frightened by the purple face and struggling body of the first security guard who was killed. Immediately afterwards, a total of 11 people were killed in the audience. Various methods of death and stunts were done quite professionally. The bloody effect almost made people vomit on the spot. (I almost vomited.) The
film's description is still a deep problem, and critics have even labelled the post-80s syndrome.
Regarding buying a house, in Hong Kong, buy a house with a sea view of Victoria Harbour.
A female white-collar worker who just graduated from college with a low income, for the sake of a childhood expectation complex, she tried her best to buy a sea-view real estate with a monthly payment of 10,000 yuan - Victoria No. 1, 8B.
She paid so much for it that in the end, she couldn't let go of her overdrawn dream, indirectly killed her father, and attached the first installment of the house.
Finally, the owner suddenly raised the price, returned, and pushed her about. . . . . . Expectations crumbled.
Like an experienced repeat offender (this is the most buggy part of the whole film), she killed 8B's current owner, and then the perfect third-degree film theory: someone accidentally saw this uninvited guest, the killer instinctively This is the end of this group of men and women who are playing 4P.
The next day, "Next Weekly" published a report that Victoria No. 1 had 11 dead and 12 lives (including the pregnant woman played by Michelle Ye), which instantly became a haunted house.
On the other end of the phone, the heroine who was lowering the price by the buying agent had the scar on the corner of her mouth upturned, which was strikingly calm. . .
Then it's over. It's terrifyingly clean, and it's not bad at the third level. Except for blood and pornography, it is rarely mixed with other things.
There was a discussion after the performance, the heroine He Chaoyi appeared, and a professor from the Department of Journalism of CUHK appeared.
So everyone's attention was completely drawn away from those bloody to "beautiful" massacre scenes, and
began to discuss the real estate life belonging to the post-80s generation.
For a
house , you can give up 30 years of freedom to repay the loan, but sadly, the house price will always rise faster than artificial.
The eyes in the houses that were once demolished,
looking at this seascape that belongs only to the rich,
can't even save the capital of anger.
The hostess said, "I don't care about the deposit, I just want to buy a house.."
But the entire empty real estate in Hong Kong is waiting to raise its price, who is willing to kick the bonus to give these ant people a shelter?
It's a crazy city,
and
it's crazy to survive .
I can't imagine that
when we also face this day,
will our life also become a tertiary film?
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