Cui Minzhi's acting skills have been superb, and every gesture is a play. The pain of losing a child, sympathy with Shanjun in the bamboo forest, and finally slaughtering and tragically perishing together, all performed well, no increase or decrease.
As the second male lead, he also has a lot of scenes in the nine scenes, and he has a fight with Captain Ahab in "Moby Dick". Of course, he is darker than the captain.
The Japanese have unfortunately become the object of ridicule again. They have just been complained about hunting dolphins in "The Mermaid", and in this film they have suffered heavy casualties in order to fight tigers. Not only was the body bitten by Shanjun, but even when climbing a snowy mountain, he would fall to his death and fall to his death. The screenwriter's painstaking efforts are admired.
The plot direction is reasonable. Qianmande is the king of hunters, and Shanjun is the king of tigers. The two are fighting each other, hurting each other, and relying on each other. Just like Brad Pitt's third child in "The Burning Years," fights a bear and ends up being a bear.
Bangzi's ability to adapt scripts is very strong, and he can always dig out new ideas in existing scripts. As for Shanjun grabbing food from the wolf's mouth and returning Mande's son, this part of the play can only be regarded as a small episode, but it seems to be a bit inconsistent overall. After all, the son of Mande was seriously injured by Shan Jun himself. After the killing, he suddenly moved with compassion, and deliberately killed the wolves and returned them in person, which was always a bit superfluous.
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