Brandon Russell starred in a domestic film of the same kind, and it was better than this one
Hey Hairdo. Hey Heat Wave. The Legends are here.
This passage is already a very polite evaluation: the horror atmosphere is acceptable, the makeup and scene special effects are more realistic, the sense of oppression is strong, there are more high-definition close-ups of Vampire's face and fangs for a long time and ultra-fine distance, and Jump is less used. In the case of Scare, the fear can still be multiplied.
The following is the real evaluation: There are many similar themes, although there is no need to generalize the unified system, but there is a significant gap in the perception and production of the same batch of American horror films. This film is acceptable in the production of horror clips. It is a barely qualified film horror movie.
However, the starting and transition are poorly done, the shots are incoherent, the front and back are rigid, some editing and literary dramas are extremely exaggerated, and the audience is really unbearable because of the deliberate sensationalism. Except for Jim Fallen and Vampire's excellent performances, other group performers generally pull their hips, the line design is extremely protracted, the editing has a feeling of hastily pieced together, the plot goes high and low, and the story design in the second half is suspected of being watered, which is quite unsmooth. deceived by the public account
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