It's really..."Big Bombing", the content of the movie is exactly in line with the title of the film, basically every 5 minutes, there will be a blasting scene, a big explosion in five minutes, a small explosion in three minutes, and it feels like the whole film I've been bombing... In terms of plot, this movie tries to use a line of small characters to highlight the war scene, but the final effect is: each has its own stories with little connection to each other.
In fact, this embarrassing situation has become very prominent when all kinds of big-name actors are "counting to the clock". It seems that the director seems to deliberately give these actors some scenes, but it has led to various story branches "looming" and no main character. Time and focus, when watching this movie, one of the most frequently asked questions is: "What happened to XXX?" Since the director doesn't want to explain about these characters, why do you want to draw out their story lines?
To give a very detailed chestnut, during a bombing, many group performers died, only one child survived very lucky, and this child has no connection with the subsequent plot, which makes people suspicious, such a setting What is the intention? If you want to arouse the audience to lament the cruelty of war, in fact, it is the old and weak children who are most vulnerable to casualties in war, not the able-bodied young people around her.
And we generally see that in movies, if the child is really arranged to survive, then she is of great significance to the development of the plot, but in "The Big Bomb", it is not. A senior film critic said: In war films, making little girls cry alive is the magic weapon for bad film directors to create atmosphere. Dare to let the little girl die is what makes "Schindler's List" great.
It was originally a very serious topic, but it was photographed like this! I don't blame Cui Yongyuan for disss, I don't blame the audience for scolding!
Now, I'm really glad that it can't be released in China.
Don't let everyone get dirty
View more about Air Strike reviews