Life is like a drama, all rely on acting skills, these few let me have a good lesson........
Director: Isra Edelman
Starring: O · J. Simpson / Robert Kardashian / Bee Arthur / A. C. Collins / Maca Clarke
Another excellent documentary series after "New York Disaster Star" and "Making a Murderer". It is a 5-episode documentary television film produced by director Isla Edelman. Bringing the murder of O.J. Simpson, a famous football player who shocked the United States, to the screen again, through an in-depth presentation of Simpson's life trajectory, exploring the two topics that American society is most concerned about: race and celebrity...

The shattering of the African-American dream. Previous knowledge of Simpson's wife murder was limited to Linda's book, and this drama is a good combing of Simpson's experience. The first two episodes are all foreshadowing, telling you why this case became the reason for the trial of the century. A man who has not spoken out for the race movement ends up being the beneficiary of the race movement...
Directed By: Steven Spielberg
Writers: Jeff Nesansen
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio / Tom Hanks / Christopher Walken / Martin Sim / Amy Adams
Frank (Leonardo DiCaprio) is the youngest wanted man ever in the FBI. His criminal means are magical, his ability to disguise his identity is beyond ordinary people, and he has left his criminal footprints almost everywhere in the United States. Disguised doctors, lawyers, pilots, all of them are his former identities. Of course, Frank relied on this "skill" to defraud millions of dollars.
Frank, who lived happily, successfully forged a certificate of academic qualifications this time and went to the hospital to become a doctor. Frank not only meets nurse Breda (Amy Adams) here, the two spark love, but also gets a copy of the prosecutor's assistant through Breda's father. However, it was only the eve of the storm—a pair of eyes had already fixed on Frank, vowing to bring him to justice. This is FBI Agent Carl (Tom Hanks).
In the course of studying the hunt for Frank, Carl learned the superior intelligence of this criminal genius. He was repeatedly teased by Frank, the yellow-haired boy, and his heart hated and had to be admired. Whenever Frank has a thrilling escape from his elaborate layout, this cat-and-mouse game seems to be fun...
The retro style of the opening is awesome, the overall approach and the choice of soundtrack are also very similar to the feeling of Hollywood films in the fifties and sixties, especially Hitchcock, and the extensive use of local close-ups plays a very big role in rendering the atmosphere; as for the film itself, it is still that sentence: When it comes to storytelling, Spielberg is always one of the best.
Director: Brian Singer
Writers: Christopher McQuarrie
Starring: Stephen Baldwin / Gabriel Byrne / Benicio del Toro / Kevin Pollack / Kevin Spacey
A cargo ship exploded in the port of San Perelo in California, killing 27 people and missing $90 million. After the accident, FBI agent Keech White waits at the hospital for the unconscious survivors, while Customs Commissioner David (Chaz Palmintri) interrogates another survivor who has been granted amnesty, Gingt (Kevin Spacey).
Gent confessed that Keaton (Gabriel Byrne), Fat (Benisio De Toro), McManow (Stephen Bowen), and Du Xueni (Kevin Pollack), who were killed in the accident, as well as himself, were taken to the police station for one night six months ago as suspects in the truck robbery, and the five formed a criminal gang and made several bad bucks. One day, lawyer Kobayashi (Pete Posirthwaite) finds them and asks them to burn the drugs on the freighter for the mysterious boss, Caesar Sur. Fat was the first to quit and was killed, leaving four people forced to accept the task. On the freighter, McMano, Fat, and Keaton did not find the drugs, so they were killed by Caesar, the ship was also blown up, and Ginter survived because he stayed on the shore to meet him.
Classic crime suspense film, an almost seamless lie, a wonderful deception. The narrative of the film is very successful, and the suspense of properly shaking the baggage has been tightly grasping the audience's attention from beginning to end. The mystery is unveiled at the last minute, and it is evocative while being jaw-dropping. The moral of the story is also thought-provoking: there is no equal sign between the evil appearance of the fierce god and the great evil, and perhaps the cunning lies and the pitiful appearance are the standard of the devil. This is a film that never tires of watching, slowly chewing on the dialogue and the hidden key left by the plot, and the wonderful thing is amazing.