The British can be so terrifying. The ending of a suspenseful yet a little thriller can be made into a warm and loving style. I thought White killed Black with a bullet, but the director came up with a very terrifying story. Turning around, what was injected was a drug that gave people super anti-virus self-healing ability. Black's eyes were full of gratitude. The director almost didn't add the halo to the post-production. People have to hesitate whether to remove the suspenseful label and put the nonsensical label on it.
It seems that the European style of acting is really far from Hollywood. Most of the actors in Hollywood thrillers are superficial, with exaggerated facial expressions and painful screams, running all the way, performing deadly screams, just like the 1974 movie. The scream of the woman in "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" is still unforgettable. European film actors attach great importance to inner performance. For example, the heroine in "Eden Lake" directly expresses the extreme horror of the characters through the dilated pupils and bloodshot eyes. But to be honest, British thrillers are too casual and illogical to explain the origin of the story. The candidates in "Exam" (Exam) directed and acted a thriller story for a really blunt reason. To the point of seeing blood, the heroine of "Eden Lake" just killed a dog of the group of children, and was chased and killed by these children all the way. It seems that these directors paid too much attention to the planning of the scene and neglected The reasoning of the story, or perhaps the British is such a character.
News often see a lot of amazing things happen in the UK, like a woman who has never been to China and speaks English with a Chinese accent after a car accident. What is even more strange is that many British people think that the great man of World War II Churchill is a fictional character and Sir Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes is real.
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