I'm still impressed by the time when people were suspicious of each other, the camera was always sneaking behind the protagonist, but each time as a possibility, not any fixed attacker, and those parts were well shot. When unknown and uncertain shots follow people, the uncoordinated answers add to the suspenseful pleasure. But the ultimate truth makes the whole story seem a little scary, more completely lost the sense of fear, and makes it nondescript.
At the end, the scene where the heroine in a red dress is taken away by the warriors in the ice and snow is great, and it seems that she wants to return to some kind of beautiful fairy tale itself (but she can't resist the original book at all).
This film is generally handled well in terms of atmosphere, and it feels a bit like
The point of failure is the whole story design. The length of 1 hour and 40 minutes seems to be a bit rushed, so that the plot content seems to be rushed, reluctant and unusual. Of course this is just my personal opinion.
But when it comes to the horror elements that should be there, I have been measuring where the horror of the whole film is. To be honest, the whole film didn't scare me, but I was shocked by the gloomy poster cover I saw first: such a heart-shattering red is like a cold knife in itself, even in the cold dense forest. It's especially abrupt to leave out all the stories -
I'm so emphatic about the colors and atmospheres because this off-topic "fairy tale" is so utterly unspoken.
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