The narrative connection is a little abrupt, and the screen is full of Song Zhongji's face and chest

Horacio 2022-12-01 07:10:25

I just finished reading the second part of "The Glory and Dreams 1932-1972 American Narrative History", which basically covers the entire period of Truman's administration. Naturally, it talks about the naval battle of Midway and the atomic bomb dropped on Japan.

Find "Battleship Island" to make up lessons.

I don't know whether it is due to the time limit of the film or the director's editing, the connection of the stories is a bit abrupt, and the sense of separation between the front and rear narratives is very obvious.

The film overemphasizes individualism, probably Song Zhongji saved the entire Warship Island alone, and the group play in the second half also seems to be sensational for the sake of sensationalism. Looking at the whole film, the memory point is probably Song Zhongji's face and chest. So Ji-sub's character can probably be used as the main line for a sequel.

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