A neat movie.
The structure is very clear. The experiences of childhood and adult stories are constantly interspersed. The author intends to build a structure that is constantly decrypted, but because there are similar movies in front, it is not a brain-burning, and the progress of the plot can be roughly guessed. When I watched it, I thought, if the little head of the mercenary is the protagonist's brother; the increasingly irritable villain is estimated to be solved happily, which is inevitable. The narrative angle is average.
This movie lacks moral judgment. The screenwriter wants to create a contradictory image like Batman who walks on the edge of crime and punishes evil and promotes good, but unlike Batman's coquettish three views, accounting is The upright one doesn't have so much mind to do things, and it happens that he does something that conforms to mainstream value judgments - laundering money and exposing criminals at the same time. Or in fact, the accountant did not have a deep moral discussion, and the character who was a bit self-tortured was a police officer - which happens to be another commonality between the two films. The protagonist has a justice messenger to help, and he walks in the dark. Different from Batman's natural mission of upholding justice because of the shadow of his childhood and being the son of Gotham, the setting of accountants and autism allows the protagonist to do "good things" without falling into the question of self-worth, of course prison. The gang and the loss of his parents also rationalized his character and motivations. It's just that the universal container of character flaws makes the description of the protagonist more receptive and receptive. From this point of view, this movie does not have the profound implication of Nolan Batman that makes people think about human nature, and makes people's viewing experience more pure and relaxed.
This movie brings the thrill of killing. I really like that kind of madness, clean and neat, no nonsense and even perfectionism. Simplified or even rudimentary RV layout, the opening and closing of the garage is quite precise, the hands are shot and headshots, the protagonist's brother explained the "never seen" Bai Bu Chuan Yang in the decisive battle, all of which made watching the movie full of obsessive-compulsive disorder of pleasure. From the story flow of fighting monsters and leveling up to destroying bosses, this chapter is very mature, with few abrupt layouts, and the fighting scenes will not make people feel too few. In short, it is very natural and very enjoyable.
Personally, I think this is a very cool movie, especially the character setting and plot arrangement. It seems that there is a second part, and it does not rule out the possibility that the director wants to arrange it into a trilogy, but that will add a lot of plot foreshadowing that is not present in this part. If you force a life extension like The Bourne Bourne 5, you may lose the initial surprise.
View more about The Accountant reviews