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The Great Pirate: 400 words.
The Mysterious Thief Group is very infectious and inflammatory, and its story is simple to sum up. Supermodel heidi klum has a famous saying in Project Runway: "You are still here today, and you will be out tomorrow-the wind and water turn around, and the cause and effect cycle can be seen in The Fantastic Thieves. The Magic Thief just took the opposite route to deadly magic, putting suspense in the second place, but splashed ink like water, meticulously depicting the eye-catching magic performance itself-whenever four magicians created an exciting "miracle" on the stage, the screenwriter always arranged for Morgan Freeman to tell the secret immediately-so the Magic Thief did not perform "mysterious" stunts. But magic is to make the audience see things in a blur, the film editing is fast, ruthless and accurate, and many different time and space are sharply intertwined. Gorgeous lighting effects, buzzing sound tide, firmly grasped the audience's curiosity and desire to spy, narrative flowing, fast and carefree, leading the audience to be fascinated in a dazzling splendor-just like gorgeous. Of course, it also smacks of "robbing the rich to help the poor", enjoying the audio-visual senses, but it also has some flattering meanings. But unfortunately, the so-called reversal ending is too dull, dull to pale, pale to old-fashioned-the whole story is not bad, but not beautiful enough: only michael caine and Morgan Freeman are surprised in the script. Please forgive the audience for not opening their eyes and pretending "damn it, it's him". The narrative of the film is officially launched, that is, the first cooperation of four magicians "crossing the bank from a distance to withdraw money" involves the police. This introduction is so grand that the subsequent magic show or plot development is a bit too late-however, as long as you don't bother to ponder over loopholes such as logic, you can easily follow the director's lens and experience a pure feast for the eyes. The magic thief is absolutely capable of satisfying the audience. And this consistency in one go is quite consistent with the theme of magic, because magic is to win by tricks, and success can only be achieved without a clue. Magic requires practice to make perfect, and thieves are the model of accumulation. Behind the war is the long-deployed perseverance and endurance. The protagonists constantly remind and imply that the closer the audience gets, the more unclear the design is, and it also permeates the philosophical thinking of some authoritative people. If the creators can carefully package it at this point, I believe the thieves will come to by going up one flight of stairs.

Movies and magic reach the same goal by different routes-hiding on the surface, but actually reading minds-authenticity is not important, deception and exposure are not the key points, this is just a performance, and "good-looking" is king.

(ps: All the above are from: network finishing)