Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - How do you rate the second episode of Season 2 of "Secret No. 9"?

How do you rate the second episode of Season 2 of "Secret No. 9"?

It maintains the unique gloomy style of British dramas and the superb acting skills of the actors, coupled with the uncanny design of the screenwriter and director, the most dazzling story comes out of a poorly filmed subject. The light of humanity.

The most outstanding thing about this film is still the reversal at the end. The first part still has the familiar thriller atmosphere of Secret No. 9, but what is more outstanding is that the transitions of each life segment are well connected. It’s just right and so coherent that it’s astonishing, as if we were accompanying the heroine through the revolving door of her life. The chaotic and hurried revolving door of a person before dying can be captured so realistically and touchingly. One scene after another is connected and coherent. The director The ability is evident.

Photography skills:

Although the memory jumps, the lens transition looks so natural with the help of some different props, which is very consistent with the jumping nature of human thinking.

The echoes from before and after, the firefighting suits before and after, the sound of sirens before and after. When the heroine is still recalling life when she is on the verge of death, the sound of the heart-stopping machine alarm rings together with the doorbell.

A photo tells the audience whether the heroine is married.

The explanation of a knowledge point explains the time the heroine and Adam spend together. Wait, a compact time tells complex content.

When I watched it for the second time, every crumb representing a nightmare was like a thorn piercing the softest nerves of the audience. This is really a stroke of genius.

In the end, the heroine was trying to avoid someone crossing the road, and when she got into a car accident, the steering wheel turned on her side. The man in the raincoat was saved (he was indeed like a devil in the heroine's memory), and her son was also saved because of her selflessness.