You spend far more time listening to forced melodrama than you do exploring the world, solving puzzles, or interacting with
characters on a visceral level.
Not exact matches
The Wall avoids the missteps of those recent war films by eliding politics and maudlin backstories for its
characters, instead using cat - and - mouse thriller tactics to depict warfare
on a purely
visceral level.
It delivers
on the
visceral level as well, with more color than the recent and typically dour DC movies, as well as action choreography that is just cartoony enough to sell the
character.
But it also engages
on many
levels with its
visceral action, emotive
characters and interestingly bleak ideas, making it one of the best reads
on the stands.