Because "the fall" remembers Tasim Sin, the amazing Indian director. After watching this, I felt that I could only use "little freshness" to express my impression of the director. It's not the kind of small freshness with a hazy blue filter added in the Japanese style, but a small freshness with large pieces of bright and bright colors. Let's talk about the picture first. The most outstanding thing about this director who was born in advertising has always been the beauty of the picture, which is very beautiful. The screenshot of each frame is a beautiful photo. This film made me realize that the director's unique style of shooting ordinary things through perspective. For example, when the protagonist is anxiously waiting for his old friend to come in a cafe, he looks at the door.
Let's talk about the story. The scene in the town was very cheerful. After the heroine appeared, it became dull. I can't figure it out myself, why is it a little boring even though the pictures are beautiful, the actors are good, the director is attentive, the story is complete, and there are small climaxes from time to time? I can only attribute it to the director's style for the time being? For example, after escaping from an old friend's house, the scene of chasing a car at night basically ended in two minutes. There is no common "how to make the car chase scene more complicated", but directly jump to "how to make the scene of the car explosion at the end of the car chase scene beautiful" (of course, I was reminded by a friend later, it may also be a budget Not enough - -). And finally, in the scene where the protagonist and the villain are opposed, the first second of the picture is still on the slightly distorted face of the villain, and the next second, the protagonist burns them to death. There is no more nonsense and resistance, just from a static shot, followed by an impactful picture, to complete the entire expression.
So I think the director is a little fresh. The ending looks so sad. The protagonist played the cheap and the villain played the single man. As an illiterate I know so much. In all fairness, three points, one point for the picture, and one point for the director.
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