1. Lens: I can see that there are less than 10 shots taken from a fixed camera from the beginning to the end, but it is not a traditional DV recording style. I stopped shaking and watched for 5 minutes, and I felt motion sickness. The "skill" is not profound. I guess I want to use the lens language to describe the irritable feeling of the protagonist and the film itself. The funny thing is that drawing tigers is not the opposite It is estimated that the director and cameraman are from family movies. It is also considered to have created a precedent for a pseudo-DV real-record style comic hero film. Crazy Sweat
2. Rhythm: As soon as the female pig appears on the scene, it is inexplicably run with the boy, which is really incomprehensible. Mind, who is this? I'm sure it's not the castrated version? Can you take a few shots and bring Bilge into the movie with ease? Cage's first fight scene vividly reflects the director's ability to control the rhythm and tension I remembered Hideo Kojima's MGS, the fine place, the fine place, the fine place and the tickling. The movie can be embarrassed by the director, what else can I say? Along the way, with the nervous camera, a few people performed a few fight scenes that didn't even come to an end. . . . . . Hey, Cage is coming back to the literary film, okay?
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