Overall, it is stronger than the first one, with larger scenes and richer characters.
But the forced play of being cool and sensational is a bit inexplicable. After all, I don't know much about history and ethnic disputes, and I always feel that I can't find empathy. The trade-off between completing the task and helping the old and the weak is a bit old-fashioned and nothing new. Knowing that there is nothing to do, the excitement of going to death with generosity is quite sensible. But as soon as the fight started, heroism was rampant, and the protagonist couldn't die anyway, so the supporting role would hang up inexplicably, and he had to be a meat shield and pull a grenade. It was really speechless.
However, one or two shots of the movie are still very unforgettable. One is on the eve of the battle, from the scene of the character to the fuzzy tip of the grass. The tranquility of the grass sets off the silence before the crisis, and the silence before the bloody color is very quiet. It is tragic. The other is that the enemy jumped in from outside the wall and seriously injured the girl carrying the weapon. Just when the enemy was about to kill the girl with a poisonous hand, the villager soldier stretched out his hand to dress up the enemy’s foot. This long mirror is very real. There was nothing he could do when he was seriously injured, but the hard work came before him. It was so real and immersive. It was great.
How can a nation fall apart from flesh and blood, corpses and corpses,
The seven heroes are obliged to lay down their lives to guard the blood and show their loyal souls.
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