In such an environment, there must be a boy who finds the problem and leads the protagonist to find it. Another old trick.
So in my opinion, if the first part really has a labyrinth moving, OK, it is also suitable for the nomination, except for the inexplicable dialogue, after all, utopia is like this. The labyrinth movie is better than the novelty of the subject matter and the exploration psychology of the deciphering process of the labyrinth.
But in the second part, there are a lot of strange things, such as zombie stalks. In short, it does not go further than The Walking Dead in discussing the survival and death of human beings.
The final ending didn't look much, and the point worth complaining is that when the male lead chose to sacrifice, he did not sacrifice. Can you make people pretend to be forced?
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