Any movie should be aware of its quality and positioning when promoting it, right?
How much harm does misplaced propaganda do to audiences with wrong psychological expectations?
When the movie was promoted under the banner of "Train to Busan", everything went wrong
With high expectations, I watched a very ordinary zombie movie, which gave birth to a question mark in my head
First of all, from the perspective of the environment in which the whole story takes place, the trip to Busan is much more grand and shocking than the scene of this movie. This story takes place in a community, most of the time in a building, and many of them are even protagonists. A one-man show in a room... The tension depends entirely on the audience's self-imagination, but the emotional atmosphere is not enough. A horror zombie movie always has little meaning for the transmission of horror emotions, so what does the audience think?
Secondly, the plot of the zombies in the room where the two protagonists fight against each other's wits is very naive and flimsy, and full of bugs, so the mechanism setting is not as good as being a kid; under the condition of no water, it is better to keep the water for yourself than to water the flowers. Yeah; some tools and equipment of the protagonist come and go... inconsistencies and lack of logic, especially in the second half of the story, I feel like the plot is arbitrary, and the protagonist's halo is inexplicable
Finally, "Alive", I didn't watch the movie. I thought it would be more thought-provoking. After watching the movie, I just wanted to say "Oh." When the word "alive" appeared at the end of the film, it really It's hard not to complain "Just like you, do you think you can live if you're not the protagonist?"
A very ordinary movie finds a too high reference, which can only make people feel full of disappointment, and figure out their own level and positioning, which is good for the movie and the audience.
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