a5c7b9f00b Before he lost his sight. Before he pledged his service to Kublai Khan. Hundred Eyes saw what made him into the deadly assassin who trains Marco Polo. It reminds a good homework. correct, precise, admirable. reflecting smart perspective, talent and proposing the perfect missing piece for define a character. and that has two virtues - to seduce the fans of serie, to propse a window to serie for the others. fight scenes, lessons and the answer to a fundamental question. all in admirable manner proposed to public. and, maybe, this is the basic source of seduction of the short film who seems more inspire than a part of the episodes of "Marco Polo" itself. so, an admirable homework. "Marco Polo: One Hundred Eyes" is a short film from a couple days ago that is an addition to the "Marco polo" series before season 2 starts off in summer 2016. This one, however, plays before season 1 actually and elaborates on the past of one of the central characters. I thought this one needs a bit going, but when it does, it is a fairly successful work by Emmy-winning cinematographer Alik Sakharov, who is also the director here. The acting is good, the script is solidwell, including one very tense scene, in which the main character is blinded by snake poison. Nice to see the filmmakers of the series do this little movie to have fans not wait too long for season 2. More series should adapt to that concept. As a whole, it's nothing that would get me interested in watching the series, it's not that great, but a decent little watch in my opinion and I recommend it.
Whedabepart Admin replied
372 weeks ago