As for the whole world view and plot, sorry I have no interest in this kind of naive western dystopia. If the inspiration from "Battle Royale" can still bring some bright colors to the story, the strange trend of the later story is mixed with the messy love of young men and women, which may be attractive to young people in their teens, and to those in their thirties. For the uncle who picked his feet, it was really disgusting.
The story goes to the last part, where it ends with a big twist (shooting President Quinn) and a big cliché (getting back home or Peeta). I have to say that the feeling this episode gave me further refreshed the lower limit of my perception of this film: the plot is procrastinating, and the love is bloody. As for attacking the capital or something, if I had questioned Zhou Xingxing before that some of the plots in The Mermaid were unreasonable, I really wanted to slap myself more than a dozen times. Compared with this drama, The Mermaid is simply a well-founded documentary. In the huge imperial capital, a group of teenagers comforted each other, forced each other in countless landmines and traps, broke into rooms, and even took the time to watch live TV... The filming of "The Hunger Games" into "Maze Runner" really made me drunk .
There must be fans who say, so bad you still watch every episode, isn't it cheap? Well, dear, have you heard of obsessive-compulsive disorder, it's just boring, I even watched Sharknado.
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