Bad Seed ("Bad Seed"), a black-and-white feature film directed by American director Murph Yun Lero in 1956, was only fortunate to watch yesterday. The storyline is tight and gripping, the suspense is plausible, and the performance is tepid. The screenwriter, director, and actor are a classic. A child serial killer with a simple purpose: kill anyone who prevents me from getting what I want. The old lady who said she liked her and wanted to give her a gift after she died, she didn't have to wait for them to die so slowly, she had to die immediately. The film agrees with a psychological research finding that some children are born blind (Born blind), blind to morality and immorality, born cruel and ruthless, and have nothing to do with the environment in which they grow up. The film would be almost perfect if it weren't for that superfluous Chinese ending that makes me laugh and laugh. Thinking of Jackie Chan's "Around the Earth in Eighty Days", they came all the way to Turkey, and someone came to summon them: "The prince of Turkey invites you to enter the palace for questioning." The servant said, "No, no, we are not free." People were shocked: "What! This is the summoning of the Turkish prince!" The servant waved his hand casually and said, "Oh, then he better get used to not getting what he wants."
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