If there is really no beautiful man, then all its support must depend on the strong script support and the director's ability to tell the story.
"Silence of the Lambs" made a cannibalistic serial perverted killer well-known, so in the next ten years, many stories about Hannibal were released one by one, and Chinese actor Gong Li once co-starred with a handsome and handsome man. Silence of the Lambs prequel.
What kind of combination is that, whenever I see Mads Mikkelsen sitting at his extravagantly furnished dinner table elegantly cutting the liver or the loin of the so-and-so that he killed with a knife and fork, I would think, This guy was so handsome when he was young, why did he find Gong Li to fall in love? . . Look, now that he's older, he looks a little more wretched.
I remember the most impressive plot, not to raise fungi on carrion, nor to cut out the flesh of human backs to make angels. . . It's not the plot of the heavy-handed slaughter that the arrow pierces the heart. . .
It was the hero Hugh Dancy who was sleepwalking in the middle of the night, walking on the highway, followed by a deer slowly, and suddenly woke up to find that he was found by the traffic police, and he was fortunately still alive.
That dazed sense of vulnerability, even me, a woman who has always liked beautiful men, couldn't help but want the Virgin's heart to explode and embrace him. . . .
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