secondly, the final turn of the gods, although there is a foreshadowing in front (say it is him Dad, but he has never answered the phone, the male protagonist has always been on the phone with the female protagonist), but the logic is a bit unreasonable, plus the dubbing is indeed a bit bad, and the style of painting is not very good, so another half point will be deducted. (I am very tolerant)
After the bad talk, let’s talk about the good aspects:
Compared with the Busan trip, the depiction of human evil in Seoul Station is more extreme and the contrast is stronger. The human nature of the Busan trip is to fight against the public, while the human nature of the Seoul station is more focused on the official and leadership level. People who have contributed to the country live on the streets and are looked down upon. And the police and the masses also scoff at these people.
Knowing that there are survivors, but isolating them is actually understandable, after all, human nature is like this.
It's not so much a zombie movie, but a movie that exposes the sinister society~
After watching the complete movie, the foothold of "Seoul Station" should be at "home". The heroine wants to go home, the homeless uncle wants to go home, and the heroine "Dad" also wants a home.
Compared with "Train to Busan", "Seoul Station" is even more desperate.
I’ve written so much for the time being, I’ll change it when I remember it, I’m tired~
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