The trailer misled me seriously, so I watched it with the feeling of watching xx.
Suck Colin by the way.
As a result, I did get sucked in the part of rubbing the body. That part was beautifully shot, with a strong male body against the background of natural light.
The moment I read it, I thought, this name translates really well. It is indeed under the peony flowers, very romantic, and the male protagonist finally became a ghost.
But I still want to ask, why did Jon Lin take this film? There is basically no BGM throughout the whole process, and there is a strong sense of suffocation. There is no ups and downs in the plot. You think falling downstairs is a climax and it ends flat; you think that threatening girls with a gun is a climax, but it ends in a silent and inappropriate scene for children, and the final murder dinner can clearly be filmed. There was a tense atmosphere, but in the end there was no such thing. The male protagonist fell to the ground convulsively, no one screamed and no one was frightened, not even hysterical, too calm. Thinking about them, they are a group of unborn girls, so calm when they kill for the first time?
The composure of Miss Martha, the head of the family, is worth learning from. In the sense of this school, it seems to show the different stages of girls' life. Of course, I am not sure if they have been in a place like the daughter's country for a long time, and they will be deceived when they go out. Her educational philosophy needs to be questioned.
To be honest, as a woman in the new era (laughs), I really laughed out loud when I saw the girls dress up quietly on the second day after the male lead came. I don't think there is any feminism, on the contrary, it shows the stereotype of women very bluntly. But if the director himself did it for satire, then I have nothing to say.
Also, why is it not a man without a leg? They haven't castrated you yet sir.
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