like eating scene

Dameon 2022-10-06 21:30:43

Many scenes just rely on the dialogue of the actors to promote the plot, especially the dialogue between Fukuyama Masaharu and Yakusho Koji.

And everyone has something to hide. They hide the truth in their words, and it requires you to work hard to identify and reason out the truth.

Looks so tired!

The only thing I find cute is that every time I eat, Masaharu Fukuyama eats a box lunch at the law firm, chats with his colleagues about the case, eats at an izakaya with his colleagues, smokes jelly, eats barbecue, and the prosecutor drinks water from his own glass. , and Yakusho Koji dipped in mayonnaise in prison? Eating bread (thinking of going back to my house)…

Only these scenes made me feel relaxed, and I felt that it was Hirokazu-eda who was familiar.

View more about The Third Murder reviews

Extended Reading
  • Berenice 2022-03-20 09:02:52

    The third murder was "Dharma." But the retorted confession "I didn't do it even this way" is actually lacking in persuasiveness. Not to mention at least the material evidence is unreasonable. It is like a stalk buried in a daughter, but it is a design statement to audiences who are familiar with Japanese movies. Fukuyama Masaharu and Yakusho Koji's confrontation formed a focal point, but this tension and balance setup were still too "Japanese society". This is the reason for the cold reception in China

  • Ewald 2022-03-18 09:01:08

    Created a psychological suspenseful narrative rhythm, nothing wrong. As the plot deepens, the truth becomes more and more blurred. Decades ago, social problems such as underworld loan sharks, food fraud, and family sexual assaults were gradually exposed, and finally settled on judicial issues and social injustice. The whole film is a polygon mirror. The last crossing is also in the cross, which contrasts with the observation when standing outside the cross at the beginning, and at the same time it gives the dual meaning of law and moral judgment.

The Third Murder quotes

  • Sakie: I don't want to pretend not to see, like my mother.