It has to be said that there is still a big gap between it and 1. After all, the secret of revealing one's identity that is interlocked with the main line is much less attractive. And what's even worse is that it has completely lost the momentum of the blockbuster that was always tense in the previous work, and completely reduced to an ordinary storytelling drama. BOSS believes that few people can't see it, and they don't have any self-awareness of their own inner emptiness. They insist on making it into a 2-hour long novel. In all fairness, it will be better to cut it for half an hour. The two action scenes, one end and one end, are not bad, especially the final aerial fight. Although it was not brilliant, at least it was creative. As for Sharon Stone's friendship cameo, it is a pure gimmick, playing with his signature Erlang legs. Aunt Sharon was still immersed in her memories. In addition, the French are really obsessed with Vietnam, and always insist on describing the darkness there, but the military government should be terrifying, rigorous and terrifying. Is this kind of tattered military camp too underestimated where the Vietnam War was fought? In a heavily guarded camp, the soldiers did not care about anything when they saw the fire, and they put out the fire wholeheartedly. This is really a group of brave fire fighters. In short, the level has regressed significantly, and the framing is completely for the sake of tossing and tossing. In fact, it doesn't matter if the story takes place in one place. Unfortunately, looking at the quality of 1, I still think it is a star of hope.
View more about
The Heir Apparent: Largo Winch reviews