Furious, send me the leather link.

Curtis 2022-04-21 09:01:10

I remember when I was a kid, the old man used to say that we grew up in a honey pot.
Go to school, the teacher said, we are the generation of the red flag.
Growing up, some people said we were the beat generation.
No one can tell what kind of generation it is, but in any case, we will never return to the generation of war.
When I saw Norman, played by Logan Lerman, tremblingly said "8 weeks", I was so glad that I lived in a time of peace. A boy who looks like he is around 20 is involved in an endless war, he only knows how to type 60 letters in 1 minute, but he has to learn to start using brutal weapons and learn to kill . This would have been a fatal thing.
No one can change fate, the only thing that can be done is to accept and face it. Seeing that Norman learned how to shoot, and how to shoot constantly, I suddenly saw the bottle of anti-wolf spray in Zhang Li's hand in "The Road to the Heart" in my mind, facing it head-on. Since you can't escape, just fight to the death.
Fate still favors everyone, so Norman met the German girl he liked, and the first climax of the whole play appeared. Brad Pitt, like the head of the family, took off his shirt, revealing his strong chest muscles, and turned around and began to show his buttocks, ah, still sexy! However, it is really sad that a war movie needs to rely on this paragraph to make the audience bloody.
Life seems to go on like this step by step, falling in love with her, chatting and kissing with her, going to bed, eating together, and waiting for him to come back. Sudden shells tell us that it's not over. Norman is back in the war, like a killing machine.
The second climax of the whole play appeared. Don, played by Brad Pitt, gave Norman a box of biscuits, and Norman went to the hills and devoured it! I seem to hear the entire auditorium drooling.
At the end of this, you will definitely be scolded, but if you go further down, it will be a cliché plot. YES OR NO? The director easily pressed YES, and there were still 40 minutes before the end of the movie. Can you imagine spending 40 minutes fighting a life-and-death battle?
The procrastinating beginning and the moderately relaxed middle are ruined by a sloppy ending. The director just kept Norman alive, because he would suffer more, the war turned him from a child into a man, made him fall in love with a woman and then saw her die with his own eyes, and then witnessed the death of his closest comrade-in-arms . In the shadow of a lifetime, I saw the director's deep smile...
Thank you for peace. Thank you to all the martyrs who sacrificed for peace. cherish the moment.
Oh, by the way, what brand is the leather jacket, please send a link, I think it looks good, and the biscuits that Norman ate.

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Extended Reading
  • Wayne 2021-10-20 19:00:23

    I've seen so many war films, this one still brings me a different shock (Brad Pitt is old and handsome

  • Linwood 2022-03-25 09:01:05

    Men must go to the battlefield with chocolate cigarettes and eggs, and it will be better to watch a palmistry song. Sherman was very excited when he broke the Tiger style, and Wushuang showed his mighty power in the second half of his guarding rage. The biggest question is that there is a little brother in the German army who has been swept down and corpses who can maintain the heart of the Virgin, waved the flashlight and only left a smile, the intention is unknown.

Fury quotes

  • Wardaddy: [Norman has just killed his first enemy soldiers] Norman. It wasn't nothin,' right?

    Norman Ellison: Come again, Sergeant?

    Wardaddy: Rubbin' out those Heinies. Splashed 'em real good. Wasn't nothin,' right?

    Norman Ellison: [With an odd look in his eyes] Sure, Sergeant. Yeah, it wasn't nothin.' Fact, I kinda liked it.

  • Trini 'Gordo' Garcia: [Deleted scene] Our tanks are shitboxes. German guns punch through them like butter. We get hit, we're gonna burn, burn up fast. You see that hatch right behind you? We get hit, I'm gone, right through there. I'm not waiting for you, and I'm not helping you. Got that?

    Norman Ellison: Yeah, I got it. Thank you.