I don't understand why it is called 28 warriors. It was obviously a company that was resisting at the beginning. There were only 28 people left in the middle, and only 28 warriors. It was not the ones who sacrificed before. This kind of node thinking is very strange, maybe this is the way of thinking of Lao Maozi.
For a 120-minute film, 60 minutes from the start of the film to the fight, the almost non-stop dialogue makes you feel like too many characters are so chatty that no one really stands out. Of course, when the battle started, the sound of the tank motors and guns was so important, and every point of the explosion was so real. Although it would have been better if the overall editing was more compact, I still encourage four stars, very solid. Of course, it is also characteristic of "Russian cinema". No exaggeration, no whitewashing, and the filming is done in a down-to-earth manner until the end, and some of the passages are a bit like a documentary.
I admire that for a low-budget film, and there are multiple tank battles, a lot of work has been done behind the scenes, which shows how serious the filming is.
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