Hybridity

Mary 2022-03-21 09:01:45

I hate that this kind of hybrid movie is completely deceived by the poster....I thought it was a fierce gunfight, and
most of the dialogues in the front were mostly wordy and half dead. The key plot...It doesn't make any sense to say it for a long time....
The last big gun battle is old-fashioned....Good people can't be killed...and only a little....Style and The previous narrative style is quite different...it feels like the transition is unnatural....the long drama is followed by a sudden fierce gunfight... the most ironic thing is that the only one who died was not an American but a
poor local special forces soldier..yes
Ah, how can Americans die... If they want to die, they should be held by foreigners. Haha... This way, it won't be troublesome! People kill people... and then the final ending director is eager to deepen the theme, especially to show the accident and coincidence of the dialogue between the two people.... The shock brought by the previous protracted dialogue and textbook-style gunfight has long been
diluted If you want force but not force... If
you want text, just go the plot line... I believe the last ending will be more powerful
. If you want force, you simply have a fierce gun battle from beginning to end... Then the death of the Saudi special forces will be even more shocking Put...
but such a mix is ​​inexplicable! Four dissimilarities!

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Extended Reading

The Kingdom quotes

  • Colonel Faris Al Ghazi: Tonight, we have the dinner in the palace. Uh, Miss Mayes, she can't be there. It's only men.

    Ronald Fleury: Only men?

    Colonel Faris Al Ghazi: Yeah, you know, tradition.

    Ronald Fleury: That's gonna be boring.

  • Adam Leavitt: How many princes are there?

    Colonel Faris Al Ghazi: Over five thousand.

    Ronald Fleury: Does every prince get a palace this big?

    Colonel Faris Al Ghazi: Some get bigger.

    Adam Leavitt: And who pays for all this?

    Grant Sykes: Exxon. Chevron. Shell.

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