All you need is to be unconventional

Randall 2022-04-19 09:03:01

One of the things that impressed me deeply about this film is that the director is determined to pursue the unconventional and outstanding. For example, when

Jay Lun introduced his great masters with great interest, people all over the country would think that he must be the love of the masters according to the general routine. There must be a lot of affection between apprentices, teachers and students. The people are wrong. Before Fang Shijie became famous, have you ever seen a one-sentence exchange between teachers and students? Yan Ni's later sentence "This is the most proud of the hungry people" is enough. (?)

At the beginning, Chen Chuhe was rendered like a fairy, and the people of the whole country would think that there must be a fight for the first brother between him and our Jay. The people are wrong. The director is disdainful to develop such a point that can be seen at a glance. . .

At the end of the game, people all over the country knew that Chen Bolin had to revive his self-confidence to throw the ball, and everyone was looking forward to Jay Chou shouting, "You can do it!". The people are wrong again. The director must have seen the intentions of the masses, how could the people guess the plot so easily! So when Chen Bolin pitched the ball, Jay couldn't say that sentence anyway. . .

In this way, the director shakes off the burden and then recklessly puts these plots into the whole movie by exposing them to the sun. Two days ago, I read the news that the director himself said that he had left a lot of foreshadowing to make a sequel. "For example, what happened to the four masters later? How will the relationship between Jay Chou and Ah Sa develop? Where did the master who saw the beginning and the end of the dragon played by Wu Zongxian go? What will happen to Jay Chou's team in the future? opponents?" But in my opinion, there are far more than foreshadowing or loopholes. I've never heard of making a sequel to a movie. It's really unconventional to split a movie into two and shoot like this!

The key to the key is such a clichéd movie, and the director even took it out and made it without hesitation.

View more about Kung Fu Dunk reviews