After seeing a lot of nasty speeches in the discussion area, I really don’t spit out.
Let me talk about the advantages first: the scenery of Western movies is beautiful, the actors' acting skills are online (it's a pity), and the director's various shots are very good.
but
But let's talk about the disadvantages below:
The director had too much foreshadowing in the first 6 episodes, and the 7th episode ended sloppily. Let's count how many pits the author has dug that are not buried and how many plots have hurriedly ended:
1. The security of the Mercury Group and Uncle Hei said not to be nosy, and will divert Labelle's river to the black village. (This foreshadowing conflict can't be resolved)
2. Myopic detectives searched for the Indians encountered on the road, and in the end it seemed completely unnecessary. At first I thought it was a split in the detective's own heart, but in the end Roy Goode said that he saw it too, and then there was nothing else... Is this Indian uncle really too idle to do anything, like a novice NPC guide.
3. The title of the film is "No God", and the screenwriter obviously wants to make a fuss about religion. The villain Frank obviously pays tribute to the villain Frank in "Once Upon a Time in the West." Frank met the Slavs in the wild propagating his godless Darwinism triumphantly, and later encountered the plague house showing kindness to overtake them as a priest. The church built in the town from the first episode to the last episode, and the priest who brushed his face inexplicably at the end. These sporadic fragments are connected in series without a main axis.
4. I believe that many viewers, like me, have a question after watching it. On earth, Roy and Frank are so antagonistic to each other. From the show in the TV series, I can understand Frank, but I can't understand Roy. Frank truly regards Roy as his family, and selflessly helps to nurture him. It was Roy who was betrayed inexplicably, and the attack was even more like a white-eyed wolf. In the end, why did Roy dug out his father's clothes from the grave and put them on? Revenge for killing his father? This may only be known to the screenwriter.
5. Regarding the shootout at the end of the seventh episode, there have been too many complaints. Based on my personal experience, the author has been in the army before. There was a comrade in the team who loved CS (counter-strike) games. As a result, the trembling gun couldn't hold steady when shooting live ammunition for the first time. So for those housewives who touched the gun for the first time, let alone whether they can aim, whether they can be opened is a question. A group of thugs who licked blood with the tip of a knife sat on the horse as a target, saying that the shredder was really not too much. In the front of this play, the old Sheriff Cook was ambushed by Frank in a bar with a headshot. The young White just tried to pretend to be forced to turn the gun and was hit with a knife. This is the most real and roughest western part that attracts me. . The final shootout really wanted to end hastily and didn't want to shoot the plot to kill things.
The Chinese character translation I saw read "No God Season One" at the beginning of the film, and the second season is no longer in the filming style of the screenwriter and director. In fact, this drama is really ambitious. There is a bit of disputes between the construction of a small town and a large trust company, a bit of feminism, a bit of religion, a bit of black issues, the growth of Indian boys, the transfer of three generations, the wheel of violence and hatred. The ending is a little bit, all of these are involved in the play and the beginning is good, the actors are reliable, if you take it seriously, you can stop it for about 3 to 4 seasons. But it's a pity that these all came to an abrupt end in the seventh episode of the "very burning and enthusiastic" episode.
what a pity
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