Having the opportunity to explore and understand such a captivating world helps make up for
the often bland characters that inhabit it.
Not exact matches
Yen, a superb screen fighter with an
often bland presence, creates the finest screen
character of his career as the dedicated but modest master who becomes a teacher to the ordinary citizens facing the oppressive rule of the occupying Japanese army and the predatory attacks of Chinese bandits.
The
character models look great, but the environments are on the
bland side and get repeated
often.
More
often than not, it resembles a formulaic, over-sentimentalized made - for - TV movie that lacks the big talent, great writing, and efficient
character development to help set it apart from other films in its genre (not to mention the fact that it's overlong and way too
bland to resonate on an actual emotional level.
Assets are reused so
often that the
bland levels merge into a soup of identical corridors and murky exteriors, and the
character models are hilariously bad.
+
Often stunning visuals + A masterfully crafted world packed with content + Intriguing and deep
characters - Soundtrack can be a little
bland - Issues carried over from vanilla Skyrim