Hao also confirmed the death of his brother Wei Jingda in the mouth of the ronin (Andy On). Hao was heartbroken, locked Hao on the school bus and planted a time bomb. The lives of Hao and a group of children are at stake. Health forced Jin and Wei to go to the carnival and deal with the black police at night. Wei's intelligence source, girlfriend Liang (), found the clue that the armored car was robbed and pointed the finger at the police.
After some investigation, the three of them found out that Zhang Jing of the police headquarters was having an affair with Tian Shengyang. It turned out that superintendent Zhang was the one who betrayed Tian Shengyang in the Vietnam War. That night, Tian Shengyang disguised himself as a policeman and went to the police headquarters to find Superintendent Zhang. Jin Chen arrived in time. At the same time, when the police headquarters was in chaos, Jin Chen decided to join hands with Tian Shengyang for a life-and-death duel.
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"Man's True Color" embodies the word "action" everywhere, and the plot is reflected by acting. What impressed me most was the dizzying movements and blasting scenes. As a "man's play", it not only shows the struggle between the police and the robbers in the traditional Hong Kong-made movies, but also takes the action scene to the extreme.
At the beginning of the film, robbers, led by Jason Wu, made an appalling explosion in downtown Hong Kong. Subsequently, Nicholas Tse, Fang Zuming and Shawn Yue fought to the death with the robbers, and there were successive crashes, jumps, explosions and fights.
Nicholas Tse and Shawn Yue, in the director's shot, several people's movements look like fists to the flesh, full of texture. A series of fierce gun battles and explosions, jumping and chasing at high altitude from time to time, and broken glass everywhere, make people feel nervous and exciting.