"Bland" suspense film

Elsa 2022-04-19 09:01:14

I found that a film review requires love to be written, and it is often the audience who gave the film the highest rating to write some thought-provoking or resonant reviews. Even if it's not some big hit American blockbuster, it's not some classic Oscar movie (but many good movies have won this award and that), and it's not some mainstream movie, you want to share it with others, because it's good A movie that doesn't work.
I just watched "The Twelve Killers" today, a bland suspense film, but I still think it's pretty good. I don't have any professional vocabulary and knowledge to say what's good about it. I just know that I want to read it in one breath at the beginning, and I feel very comfortable. I am attracted by the cracking process of this case. It doesn't have much ups and downs, deep irony, knowledge calmly tells the whole story, all the evidence, all the clues, and in the end, a very honest end to the narrative.
Some people say that the plot is so familiar that those plot controllers are not satisfied with it. But I'm going to borrow the words of a detective fan friend: a show, if the plot is already familiar to people, but people still watch it, it can only mean its extraordinary performance. That's its charm

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Extended Reading
  • Jarrell 2022-04-23 07:01:10

    some may think that it's a tad plain. it's very straightforward but still managed to create enough suspense. the acting was v even. Rob Down

  • Fidel 2022-04-24 07:01:02

    About Zodiac's story, it will be mentioned in various senior detective dramas, and it is still an unsolved mystery. That's where the charm is. He is always revealing a little bit, and restraining a little bit. Such a gentle and relaxed rhythm, and the narration of running accounts, seem to be the least David Finch style, but still charming and memorable, in the final analysis, it is the charm of the case

Zodiac quotes

  • Robert Graysmith: I... I need to know who he is. I... I need to stand there, I need to look him in the eye, and I need to know that it's him.

  • Robert Graysmith: [Both are brushing their teeth] Spit.

    Aaron Graysmith: I swallowed it.

    Robert Graysmith: Why?

    Aaron Graysmith: It was minty.