The Hunt review: An animal farm where you don't want to live

venice123

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The Hunt

"The Hunt," produced by universal pictures for a mere $14 million, is a solid b-movie that didn't come close to disturbing Mr. Trump. Partly because of the timing of the film's release, and partly because it touches the nerves of the elite.

"The Hunt" was originally released on September 27, 2019, six months ago. However, after a series of mass shootings in the us in August, the public opinion and people's hearts were not stable, so it was obviously inappropriate for another movie full of bullets and bullets.

"The Hunt" opens much like "night in the fort," which I've been playing recently, with 12 strangers waking up in a forest. A drop box with various weapons appeared next to them, followed by an attack from a blind spot that made a group worth scattering for.

"The Hunt" opens much like the first season of "zombie nation," with one actor after another with the main character's face, and the film is heavily populated with those characters. But these people are not the leading role, not for a while to die staggeringly. The audience won't know who the real leading actor is until the crucial moment.

After the initial plasma bombing, the lead actress Crystal Crystal appeared. The film begins to build a world view filled with conspiracy theories. The elite at the top and the grassroots at the bottom are like two species.

In The Hunt, the rich capture some of the poor, fly them to their private estates, and hunt and play at will.

The rich, of course, do not choose their targets at random, but at the bottom of the pecking order. On the one hand, there are so many people at the bottom that it won't matter if they disappear. On the other hand, the elite can vent their anger.
 
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