The killer is not cold, and the crime has Chinese elements!

Beulah 2022-03-23 09:02:28

There is no doubt that this killer is not too cold, although the male protagonist is not a killer in the real sense, but he is just as indifferent to people and unsmiling. I didn't expect that he has a special affection for the little girl Xiaomi. Maybe he is remembering his death in this way. His wife and unborn child, although their relationship seems to be ordinary, they are finally brought to tears. In order to rescue Xiaomi, he single-handedly killed all the enemies, and he did not hesitate to turn himself into a murderer, making the enemies tremble. Some people even describe this kind of feeling as love, and the understanding is too superficial. If you understand this kind of feeling, it really answers Xiaomi's mother's warning to the uncle, "If you do something lewd to a child, that is Unreasonable."
Judging from the events reflected in the story itself, it is really inhumane and purgatory on earth. What those criminals have done is simply inferior to the beasts. They not only sell drugs, but also let children transport and process drugs; they also buy and sell human organs, and even turn the living into the dead for this, which is really outrageous. If such a dark thing really exists in South Korea, it is really too scary, and this kind of thing has been circulated on the Internet, but it is still too insecure to be made into such a film. The bloodless children on the screen, the corpses with their internal organs removed, are too cruel. Watching the male protagonists hunt them down one by one is really pleasing. In the end, the director made Xiaomi not lose his eyes, and finally the audience did not feel Desperate, comforting.
It can be said that the male protagonist's feelings for Xiaomi are reflected in the process of his murder. In order to save Xiaomi, he can do everything. The director's handling of Xiaomi's ending is touching. In fact, at the beginning, the audience usually thinks that Xiaomi will not die. What they can't think of is how the hero will rescue her. In fact, if you are careful and pay attention to the details, you can basically guess that it is the criminal who helped Xiaomi. The most powerful killer, because when he went to see Xiaomi and the others after he was injured, Xiaomi saw that his forehead was injured, went to help him with medicine, and asked him when he could see his mother. I clearly felt the heart of this killer. Trembling a little, I decided that the bishop would definitely help in the final battle to rescue Xiaomi. Sure enough, the camera shifted when Xiaomi was about to have his eyes removed after being anesthetized, and the killer was at that time. Next to it, when Xiaomi finally got out of the car and stopped the actor who was about to commit suicide, although he didn't explain how Xiaomi survived, everyone knew that it was the killer who saved him, and the eye that was taken out was The devil who is going to operate on Xiaomi, and finally the scene of this devil is presented to the audience.
But it's abhorrent to talk about Chinese people again in the film. When the male protagonist was threatened to deliver drugs, the boss thought he was a Chinese from the mainland, and even spoke Chinese to him. The criminal pointed out that he was hiding in China Street. He didn't know what kind of information he wanted to convey. Could it be that China is doing this too much? Could it be that the Chinese can condense what he wants to express in this way? ? It is really inexplicable that a Chinese element appears for no reason.
When I saw that Xiaomi finally wanted to meet the male lead, I was excited. In short, the film is very good, the plot is attractive, the fighting is also exciting, and it captures the audience's feelings. It is a very good film.

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Extended Reading

The Man from Nowhere quotes

  • Tae-Sik Cha: How many cavities you have?

    Man-seok: What?

    Tae-Sik Cha: I have a pawn shop... and I take gold teeth.

    [pause]

    Tae-Sik Cha: I take the gold teeth... and chew all the rest.

  • Tae-Sik Cha: I'm sorry for pretending I did not know you.

    [pause]

    Tae-Sik Cha: I really wanted to know you, so I pretended I did not knew you.

    Jeong So-mi: What does that mean?

    Tae-Sik Cha: [smiles] I don't know either.