First of all, as an artist, I have to give full marks to the picture. A lot of wide-angle slash lenses are used especially beautifully. The first is to reflect the imbalance of the character's environment. The second is to reflect the unease of the characters themselves. This imbalance brings visual depth and beauty. The slashes of each shot are carefully crafted. Some are perspective positions to enhance the depth, and some are the characters sitting obliquely with their shoulders, giving the picture a curve. Really in place.
The big stars are like clouds, and Pattinson and Baozi are brilliant. In the end, it was the Dutch Emperor Spider-Man who slaughtered the Quartet in this town without good cakes. The core of the film still revolves around the dereliction and absence of religion in rural towns. The fanatical believers have nothing to do, they all pray for God's help, but they all fail utterly. The town did not get order because of the fanaticism of the believers. On the contrary, Pattinson, the scourge priest, came to the worse, and finally died, the faith of the town was completely hopeless. Those who don't believe in God have no lower limit, the corruption of corruption, the murder of the murderer and the murderer. In the end, they all died in disorder. (I just don't know how I died, so I fell for no reason)
In the end, only struggling to escape from the edge of belief and insisting on being a good person, the Dutch Emperor survived and ran away. Finally, the Vietnam War draft was broadcast on the radio, and he walked into the next cycle like his father. But it is worth mentioning that the last hitchhiker was a hippie car, which was the mainstream of the anti-Vietnam War in the United States at that time. Maybe he got some sleep and had a different option, which was a gift from God.
View more about The Devil All the Time reviews