The plot at the beginning of the film is very unreasonable. As a poor and anxious senior robot boxer, he will be easily distracted by a foreign beauty. At the critical moment of such an important game, he turns around and flatters, making the attackers unjustly die at the horns. Down. After that, my brain got hot, and I wasted the loud talk I got from selling my son, completely making me forget that he was Wolverine and Van Helsing.
As soon as Dang Da Gong appeared, the scumbag name of "Super Evil Man" on his body instantly gave people the feeling of watching a domestic copycat sci-fi film.
Of course, salted fish always have to turn over. When the mountains and rivers were exhausted, the son appeared with good luck. Yes, the plot is such a cliché, every step is as the audience expected. After the battles were won, it was time to turn around: the father was beaten, and the aunt came to beg the child.
Max seemed mentally more mature than his father. When his aunt picked him up, he said, "I have a lot of fun toys for you to play with. Do you want to play? It's fun." The man was packing his luggage seriously, preparing to say goodbye to his father and his career. The comparison of the two is quite comical.
The final battle is inevitable, and the ending of course follows the conventions of boxing movies, but the counterattack is changed from a Diaosi boxer to a Diaosi robot. The whole movie is really nothing new. But, damn it, they actually played the father-son card.
I hate to admit that father and son cards always touch me. Sometimes I even think that I would rather my father sold me back then, just in exchange for a short time to work together with him.
View more about Real Steel reviews