When I picked up this DVD and said to the boss, "Just watch this", the boss was very happy and said, "This movie is so good!"
This sentence gave me an illusion, making me think that Renault is still in the 10s The big nimble man who watered the plants every day, only drank milk, and went out to kill a few people in his spare time to make trouble for the police, but after watching the movie, I realized that was not the case at all. It's not the boss who's wrong, it's me, I'll be wrong, the boss refers to the movie itself rather than Reynolds by saying it's good-looking.
In the film, Reynolds no longer has the dodging and maneuvering he used to do, and he no longer has a quick and deadly move. Even the sharp eyes of the past have become unusually calm and tranquil. From beginning to end, his biggest action is estimated to be the last two police officers in the film when they avoided the flood. (In the most recent "The Da Vinci Code", he didn't even have these, only literary dramas).
I once wondered if Reynolds had been doing too much comedy in recent years and had forgotten how to fight a murderous foe, but then when a feature of him appeared, the wrinkles on his face made me understand it all - Reynolds getting old After all, this man with a face full of vicissitudes came to this world in 1948. He can no longer beat the world with his fists. We can forgive Jackie Chan for hanging Weiya with a double in "New Police Story", and we can forgive Shi Zhouchang's increasing Gone biceps and a bulging belly, so why can't we forgive Raynor's increasing dialogue and waning fights (not to mention his magnetic voice)?
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