The traitor's uncle was turned against him like this. It's too childish. He was persuaded by a few big truths and a few bowls of wine? There is a lack of a complete transformation process here, whether it is a background introduction, or whether it is stimulated by something, there must be a good reason for the big traitor to become an independent.
What's going on with the public trial, how could the uncle be released? Are the Japanese such reasonable invaders? The journey of revenge is too smooth, right? It's bombed, and the cloaked boy rode the car and sent the explosives into the Governor's Palace. The great cause of independence is so easy, right?
In the part on the train, I was paying attention to the decoration of the carriage throughout the whole process. The solid wood carriage door crossed the glass door on the high-speed rail of "Train to Busan" in minutes. This part has the only small climax of the whole film, which is to find the traitor, but what do you think There is a traitor hidden even deeper.
The paragraph in which the female revolutionary was caught fell asleep directly.
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