To sum it up, I think this movie is pretty average. I read some short reviews before, I read it with high expectations, and the result was really disappointing. I didn't see anything very shiny in this movie, the plot was bland, I didn't see a climax, and I didn't see any clever design. In terms of suspense, the big suspense about who is the boss is not revealed until the end, and some other small suspense are diluted by some irrelevant plots, and there is no desire to explore. Humor, can't laugh. In terms of performance, it's too fake. I know the director deliberately made it like this, but it feels like watching a sketch. There are also few bright spots in production.
Some people gave the following comments: I don't know what those who gave Samsung think, in fact, we think so.
Analyzed in chronological order.
At the very beginning of the film, the FBI is the first to appear. Looking at the watch, the director gave a big close-up, which should be trying to express that the FBI knew something happened during this time, and he got the news that the security system was upgraded. The main characters are introduced in turn. It is worth noting that there are several places where the loan officer is known to be innocent from his phone call in the toilet. The black female teller's self-talk when she saw the male protagonist showed that she was unaware. The male protagonist's watch alarm should be to remind him to take medicine. At first I thought it was to remind him of the time of the robbery. Taking the medicine is just a pretense, but from the expression of the male protagonist and the female protagonist who turned around after the first conversation, I can see it. Out that he didn't know in advance about the impending robbery.
The next two groups of robbers appeared. After a while, the FBI was shot to break the deadlock. The shooter's hand appeared on the screen, and it was a man's hand. Question 1: Is it Weinstein? From the reasoning behind the male protagonist, it seems that it is Weinstein, but the pistol looks different from the gun in Weinstein's hand at 26:40. Did he still carry two guns?
Then the male protagonist coordinated the relationship between the robbers and obtained the FBI wallet by the way. Then all the hostages were locked in a certain room. We chatted for a while. The two foolish robbers ran to the vault and laughed again.
During the call time, the computer man was found by the man who cheated. The male protagonist reasoned about the FBI wallet and found that the FBI came here not for banking business but for other purposes.
The bomb went off. Weinstein and Gates were angry, ready to kill the duo of fools, and then temporarily let them go (note that Weinstein's pistol is different from the one that killed the FBI).
The male protagonist met Darun and Weinstein in the vault, and Weinstein killed the FBI by default. The male protagonist exposes the news of the computer male selling. The computer man's sentence "I didn't kill the FBI" revealed that he was a member of the BOSS group, and he knew that the FBI would die.
The trio was hindered from entering the vault and quarreled a few words. Gates found the duo of fools, and the three checked the rankings online. During the period, the male and female protagonists found night vision goggles in the toilet.
The computer guy goes to the bathroom with the fat security guard, Weinstein comes in and the conversation with the computer guy shows that Weinstein is also a member of the BOSS group. Then they both disappeared at the same time.
Duo of Fools and Gates pick the hostages, and when it's over, the old man goes to the toilet again.
The male protagonist threw a bomb on the duo, jumped to the FBI body to find the pistol, and then learned its identity. The male protagonist reasoned that Weinstein killed the FBI, and then found the bodies of Weinstein and the computer man. The male protagonist pointed out that the two were a group. Found the key in Weinstein's mouth.
Darun took the blowtorch, quarreled with Gates, left, was killed by the blowtorch that had been manipulated, and Gates continued to act. The stupid fat robber chatted with the male protagonist and got his fax. The old man fainted, the Swiss woman stayed, and the others looked for medicine. When everyone got back together, the male protagonist quarreled with Gates and got a fax. After a lot of fun, the Swiss woman's body was found and she received a fax. At this time, the expression of the fat security guard is really classic.
The male protagonist discovered the conspiracy through three faxes, made it clear to everyone, and pointed out that the BOSS was among them.
Gates blasted the vault, filled with money, and everyone gathered. The female protagonist pointed out that the male protagonist was the BOSS, everyone followed suit, and the male protagonist ran away. Question 2: What is the purpose of the heroine doing this at this time? Not stupid enough to think that the male protagonist is the BOSS, right?
The male protagonist turned off the lights. At 1:13:37, a muzzle appeared, not a pistol:. Question 3: Who was the murderer at this time? Is it not the old man, all clues point to the old man is the BOSS, but the old man is holding a pistol.
The heroine turns on the light, the old man chases and kills the male protagonist, the man proclaims his plan and the old man is the BOSS, the heroine shoots the old man, from the old man's words, (1 million US dollars, 2 million US dollars) should be admitted to himself identity of. Question 4: Why did the old man suddenly lose his composure and then be shot to death?
I hope that friends who have read the whole film can answer my four questions, thank you!
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