She would cry to her close friend, constantly check his phone calls and text messages, to determine whether it was true. Look, I'm using her here, usually the betrayal in a marriage is a man, it seems that loyalty is more difficult for them :) Of course, there are more extreme situations in reality: a local couple two days ago The couple died "surprisingly" at home. Insiders rumored that it was because the husband had an affair and was turning on the gas for the unemployed wife who was depressed at home. The two died together. Poor, leaving a child just in the first grade to live with an elderly grandma.
Pull away.
Originally, I thought that "Butterfly on Wheels" (24 Hours of Redemption) was not a particularly exciting film, and it was only because of the presence of the former 007 franchise in China. But at the end, I couldn't help laughing -- a very good educational book for married men. Look, what kind of 24 hours Neil, who seems to be loyal to his wife, children and family, has gone through?
However, as a movie to be recommended to married men, it seems that "24 Hours of Redemption" is still a bit scratchy. Its plot firmly draws a happy ending that looks full of warmth at the end: wife Abby It explains the original intention of the setting: I just want to be with Neil, let him experience the fear of losing children and family, the feeling of two people relying on each other. Hehe, such a scheming Abby came out of such a simple purpose. At that moment, the director might as well come out and read the Bible and say something about the importance of marriage and family to a successful man.
There was such a dramatic design in the front, and it was finally over, which made people feel disappointed. It seems that Agatha Christie's novels have turned into the murderer's forced confession and confession at the end, instead of revealing the bloody truth of human evil. . The reason for such weakness is that the entire film is in vain with the unexpected structure and the actors' dedication. Going back and thinking about it like this, I feel that the previous foreshadowing is really a joke.
In fact, the part of burning money and throwing it out of the car was very exciting; Neil, who was afraid of heights, stood on the top of the building and was sweating. Dyeing caused Judy to be fired, ahaha, the way Neil blinked when he was smoking, should be a standard liar, right?
However, the failure is precisely at the end, when the whole story unfolds the "why". Abby knows everything, she set the plan, she wants to let this man who seems to have a successful career and a happy family in front of him have a taste of fear: let him understand what it is when he can't lose everything he can't lose. such a feeling.
But is that all there is to it? Do you still love him after this? When none of this happened? Is Brosnan only the executor of this disciplinary action? Is it okay to just sit on the floor at home when you're done? Weak, why not just be cruel, let the ending be unexpected, and be more cruel, and make the man who cheated his wife and children and smug mouth stealing a little more miserable? ----From this unbearable, we can see: the director is a man, and he must also be a married man, by the way, Mike Buckle, the director of "The Perfect Plan" in 1999, male.
But "24 Hours of Redemption" still expresses a possibility "valuably". On the issue of her husband cheating, the woman can take a more proactive attitude than crying. Of course, she must have enough IQ to play his woman to death--- -Let the self-righteous, well-rounded man who plays the role of a good husband and a good father in marriage, creates an image of a successful man in his career, and wants to find happiness in his lover, to taste the fear of nothing.
So, in light of this instructive reader we've finally found, let's change the ending to impress the married man a bit more: Abby sets up a set and Neil jumps off the mansion? Or make Neil a murderer and kill the woman he's implicated in? Let two men duel, surely Neil can't win 007? Let him die anyway.
Then the house is scattered.
Maybe the director originally had a more cruel ending. In the idea of curing the disease and saving people, let it go.
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