Exciting "Suspect" and stunning Gong Yoo

Ulices 2022-04-19 09:02:53

Apart from South Korea, no other Asian country can make a commercial action spy movie so pan-Hollywood style! Whether it’s a quick edit of an action scene, or a large number of hand-held shots and fragmented character dialogues, as well as a slightly chaotic narrative timeline and a tense soundtrack, a heavy and exciting car chase scene, plus Shang Naida's protagonist and just the right emotional scenes are reminiscent of the classic Hollywood spy film "The Bourne Bourne".

Many people said that the photo copy of "Bourne Bourne" seems nothing new. Personally, I think that even if it is copied, "The Suspect" has passed the copy, and has copied part of the essence. For example, when the protagonist is injured and cultivated, or interspersed with emotional scenes in the protagonist's dream, to explain the protagonist's past and pave the way for the development of the plot. This is the way Hollywood is used to it. We can also copy, but let's see what we copy. For example, the same adaptations of "Lobster Detective" and South Korea's "Extreme Profession" must be understood by everyone who has seen it.

I haven't seen Gong Yoo's other works before, including "Train to Busan", but this time I was really surprised by his eyes in the last scene. He hesitated at first; then determined that the little girl was his own daughter, but the daughter did not seem to recognize him. At this time, the look in Kong Yoo's eyes, that kind of expectation, that kind of eagerness to see through, made people cry several times. In the end, I finally met my daughter (this echoes the prenatal education done by Kong Yoo's wife in the middle), my emotions finally broke out, and my tears couldn't stop falling. With just the acting skills of this look, you can dump some fresh meat for a few light years! In fact, we appreciate and affirm more Korean films, because in them we can see the dawn that some domestic films do not have!

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