After watching it for a long time, I realized that the marine lifeguard was played by Lee Min Ki. Lee Min Ki was cute and cute, and he was hesitant, afraid and fearful before sacrificing himself to save the scum. In the end, his strength was really for him. Like it, but I think there are good people and bad people, there is no need to sacrifice your precious life for such a scumbag. Does something have to be worthwhile to do? Some people may say that there is no distinction between high and low life, but I just think that the life of the lifeguard at sea is more valuable than the life of the rich second-generation hooligan. Many people say that the first half of the story is boring, but I find it very funny, probably because I have a low laugh. In the first 50 minutes, a bunch of flesh-and-blood characters were portrayed, so that when the tsunami occurred later, we would have a sense of substitution. We were nervous and afraid of the characters and entered the plot. The tsunami scene is described very little, and sometimes it just flashed by.
What would you do if a natural disaster happened one day? If I were that seismic surveyor and detected a possible tsunami, I might have evacuate myself first. He was the first to discover the tsunami, but he also died trying to save his own child. No matter how you report to your superiors, the leaders just don't believe it. What will you do at this time? Life and death are trivial matters, but everyone will be unwilling to let you put down everything, put down money, put down fame and fortune, put down the house you have worked hard for for many years and retreat. If it were me, maybe I wouldn't believe it either. We all have a fluke mentality.
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