1. The plot is fairly compact. Because I haven't watched 1 before, I watched 2 directly, and suddenly I felt a sense of jumping. At the beginning, I didn't understand that I was dreaming for Mao Nan and pig feet. The situation of escaping the atomic bomb under the huge "pothole" is repeatedly interspersed. I see a lot of people in the comments saying that this film is bad and so on, but I don't understand it very well. At least this film is a hundred times or 10,000 times better than some domestic bad films!
2. Male pig's feet and female pig's feet are a combination of handsome men and beautiful women, and they are more eye-catching visually. The male pig's feet can be regarded as a standard sportsman in terms of appearance and figure, and he is so brave and has a mind. Moreover, the female pig's feet don't smile much, and she has a cold and glamorous temperament. Personally, I prefer this beauty! It's just that the ending is a little regrettable. I hope that a lover will eventually be married, but the male pig's foot is a "warrior" and can't do anything, so the "fly in the ointment" in the eyes of these lay people is actually what the plot needs. They used to have each other and that was enough. However, in the end, there is still some misunderstanding. Does that "red-haired beauty" also like male pig's feet, so she cares about his life and death, and every time at a critical moment, she looks like she wants to save the male pig's feet, and that "Snake Jing" was really worried that she would be beaten to death when she was fighting. If she did die, it would be too tragic. Fortunately, the final outcome was to sit in a hand-cuffed machine and go with the male pig's feet. Thinking of it this way, she is much luckier than the female pig's feet.
3. 3D under the blood and violence. Watching a 3D movie is naturally an unparalleled audiovisual enjoyment, so more scenes of blood, violence, shootings and tragic deaths will naturally add a lot to the film itself, but in fact, I don’t really like such scenes. It feels too cruel, every time my heart goes to my throat, I have to turn my back for a while, and then I dare to watch it after such a scene has passed! I feel that it is better to promote more truth, kindness, beauty and warmth. At least I feel more at ease. After all, there are more things that make us unhappy in real life! Sometimes people go to the cinema just to seek warmth, happiness, relaxation... Of course, the grades are higher!
4. Damn Japanese. The image of the Japanese presented in the film is really making people grit their teeth. The ideological message conveyed by the film is too obvious. I really don’t know what the Japanese will think when they watch it. In fact, at the moment when the atomic bomb was dropped on Changqi Island, the young Japanese soldier still showed a lot of Bushido spirit in defense of national dignity. At least from a patriotic point of view, I still think he is a man. And when those cruel scenes filled with gunpowder smoke passed, when he climbed out of the "hole" to see the "barren land" around him, the nostalgia, reluctance and sadness in his heart were quite touching, at least in terms of human nature It is logical and understandable. But the man who was rescued by the male pig's feet, in the end, not only did not repay his gratitude, but instead slapped him, creating all kinds of false impressions for the male pig's feet, asking the male pig's feet to protect his granddaughter, hoping that he would have "eternal life" and trying to drain the male pig's feet. The energy inherent in pig feet and gods, etc., is simply maddening. It made people very angry, and in an instant, he forgot all the little kindness and patriotic enthusiasm he showed in the previous plot. I suddenly hated Little Japan again. It's just about Japan's "high-end black", I wonder how little Japan will feel after watching it?
Eh, by the way, watching this movie is actually a slap in the face. The other movie I wanted to watch is too late to wait. But the effect of this viewing is still quite good, much better than expected!
View more about The Wolverine reviews