Huang Xiaoming couldn't appear in Director Hong's play, because his idol burden is too heavy. Of course, Director Hong's man can't be ugly, he can't be too handsome, even if his face looks good. You can't use hairspray, it's best to look like you haven't had a haircut for half a year, and a set of thick hooded down jackets, so that you can't see any light, so you're all the way. In addition, Director Hong is good at "sitting", which is a scene of sitting and drinking soju. Even if you are five feet eight, you will be three inches. Director Hong's man just doesn't want you to have any light, just as you are, because you are likely to be wretched and despicable. Because you know very well that no ordinary appearance can hide the sparkle of your man.
Compared with the sloppy middle-aged men, Director Hong's female protagonists can be described as a group of beautiful women, each with their own style. Please remember Director Hong's heroine: Two Zheng Yi Jin! Zheng Encai doesn't have many works, but she is so beautiful in "Hae Won". This is rare in Hong Changxiu's works, who pursue life. Another Zheng, Zheng Youmei, is actually a beautiful young lady, but in Hong's films, her beauty is not highlighted, most of them are female students or working girls. There are also some coquettish sisters, Gao Xianzhen and Cheng Xian'e, who have a strong personal temperament, but they do not violate the harmony when they enter the Hong world. To say that the beauty cannot be restrained is Li Enzhu in the early stage of Hong, but unfortunately the beauty has passed away.
One gold is naturally Kim Min-hee. She can't say how beautiful she is, but her unique temperament. And she has become a model of female beauty so far, atmospheric, confident, elegant, and slightly neutral, which is not unrelated to Hong's films. They have collaborated on nine works. No matter their works or their lives, they have already labelled each other. At least Jin is not just a woman of Director Hong, but a woman who may have made Hong's world.
View more about Right Now, Wrong Then reviews