Let's take a look at how the same routine screenwriters are intensively reused.
Zemo slipped away from the chaotic situation to do his own thing like his own invisibility. From the escape in the episode, to looking for the Doctor in Madrid Poe, to looking for Carly in the refugee camp, to coming to Wakanda to ask for someone. One episode is not enough, even two episodes. Did you look tired? I'm tired anyway. If this person is not right, he will run away and be full of his own thoughts. Your hunter ignores the whole process, and you agreed to stare at him? The most outrageous thing is that even if he slipped away in front, it was originally a helper and not a goal. In the scene after the fourth episode, the new US team came to catch him back, and Wakanda came to seek revenge for him. In the end, no one saw it. Zemo glanced. Let him swagger away from the toilet and focus on fighting.
Let's talk about the confrontation with the wave of flag breakers. Meet the mouth gun, then start the fight, and then inexplicably let all the flag breakers run away. Each episode was repeated, and the fourth episode was repeated twice. Do you think the flag-breaker has some superb escape and concealment skills, and the one-handed golden cicada escapes the shell to the top, no, it is just running away, at most knocking down a telephone pole to block the road. Ordinary people can't catch up, even if the winged falcons also have serums, the Winter Soldiers are standing there watching them escape when the power is cut off. In the end, if the American spy hadn't killed one, and let the Falcon Winter Soldier watch this wave of people run away easily.
The blackening of the spy is also constantly repeating a routine, just trying to prove oneself, being frustrated, being bullied, then being frustrated, being bullied, being frustrated again, being bullied again. As soon as I saw him play I knew he was going to be deflated. A very deliberate routine of blackening the character, with no ups and downs at all. It does not reflect the tragic sense of fate of wanting to do the right thing but is constantly pushed to the opposite by fate, and it cannot make the audience resonate with him. Just make the audience hate him. The hunter didn't take him seriously. I can understand the emotional factors between the two and Steve even though they were very deliberate. But the U.S. imperial government that elected him did not take this American spiritual representative seriously at all, and asked for resources and resources. The two of them and their assistants carried small pistols throughout the mission, and the assistant also took Glock. Intelligence is always one step behind, and there are no support units. I don't know how this died in Afghanistan.
As for why the Winter Soldier couldn't stop the spy who hadn't hit the serum yet and was pinned aside by an ordinary assistant, Zemo also took out a Glock from nowhere. At the beginning of the arrest, it was still a decent result. Everything in the camera shot rashly, and then hung up and lost my mind. When I came back to my senses, the person was gone, it really made me laugh. In the end, I had time to tie my hands and feet, but I didn't disarm and let the assistant take out his own knife. The hilarious scene of cutting the rope and running out and getting punched on the pole I'm really speechless.
Originally, I was looking forward to a superhero action espionage drama with the same suspense, crisis and high energy as Team America 2. It seems that I thought too much.
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