2. A little messy. The relationship between men and women is a bit chaotic, the nurse and Fa Ge, the nurse and He Ke, and the boss Wang and He Ke. There is too much ambiguity, which dilutes the due flavor, or, in other words, the main line.
Boss Wang, played by Michelle Yeoh, finally put the hand on He Ke's face, which is cumbersome and unpleasant.
The nurse on horseback is as light as Faye Wong, and the Chinese dubbing is as light as Faye Wong. When she walked back to the Yellowstone compound exhausted physically and mentally, the wings were gone.
A member of our party who graduated from West Point Military Academy? Or join the party after graduation? It's like seeing the Jin in "Red Lovers" with my brother Leslie Cheung. Maybe it's because the images of party members on the battlefield that were washed into their minds when they were young are so high and complete, they have no humor and love, and they are not Xu Wenqiang or Xiao Ma or even Li Mubai. They are company commanders and teachers. Only instructors and political commissars study architecture and fall in love with Western female nurses. All I can say is that I hate myself for not being completely brainwashed, or for not being able to "dye it back" completely.
And that "perfect man" really got his eyes wet. When the second cross kite flew up, in the rustling wind, on the white cloth with the children's names written on it, it slipped from the fingertips. In the sand, I was thinking, it's so sad when a good man dies, and I really don't want to live alone when my lover dies. So I cried.
And then I saw "Seeing the Dragon Unloading Armor", and "General Changsheng" and "Perfect Man" confronted each other. These two films had to be put together. That is, they are all thin, there is no deep impression, and there is no lonely mood when the show is over. I don't know if the drama faded or people were numb.
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