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It's okay to stick to the top 2 or the bottom 2, that poster is bigger than the hole, as long as the thrown stone has a certain speed, it passes through before the poster is dented, and the prison boss's angry blow shouldn't be slow, right? Just think of a bunch of chess elephants in the top row, hit one of them at a certain speed, and that one will fly out, and the others will not fall.
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It's glue on the back and you can pull it over lightly Posters don't have to be glued to make holes If you're interested, you can try it yourself Find a piece of paper to hang it up or use a stone to pierce It doesn't feel like what I understand is why Andy dug the wall and didn't dig into the cell next door Watching the movie, it was clear that there was a wall between the two cells He dug it sideways and obviously wanted to go to the next cell How can he go down to the pipe.
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It's actually quite simple!
Once you have fixed the top of the poster, just dip a wooden strip that is not too heavy on the bottom edge of the poster! The gravitational action automatically sags, and it is still very"Plate upright"!
Old movies"Tunnel warfare"The tunnel entrances of "Guerrillas of the Plains" have such a design!
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It's a bug, do you pay attention to the hole he dug? Very narrow, if the head goes in first, you can't turn around and glue the poster again, I guess he may have a lot of glue in the two corners under the poster, and then go into the hole, and use the wind formed by the hole (it's a kind of suction, I don't understand) to glue the poster, and the glue should be very firm on the second day.
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At that time, my first reaction was this problem.
I also told my classmates.
But I think it's a movie.
There's no need to take it too seriously.
Its practical and scientific approach makes sense.
And there is certainly more than one way.
In fact, even if he doesn't come back to block the poster.
There are no problems either.
But the next day, the guards went to the cell to check.
If there's a hole right in there, it's not interesting.
Right? Everyone must be wondering how he escaped.
In this way, when you throw something at the poster, the suspense is revealed.
I think it's only in this way that I feel excited to see the end :)
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This movie has been seen by our academy organization.
That's the question you asked.
I've talked to a lot of friends.
They all agreed that I had a nervous disorder.
They said:"You can compete like this when you watch a movie. "
Ha ha. So we're so like-minded. Hehe.
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It's possible that it's just a technology that hasn't told us.
Otherwise, you'll be asked to pick up the leak!!
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1. "The Shawshank Redemption" is not based on real events, the movie is based on the novella of the same name by American writer Stephen Edwin King**.
2. Introduction:
** The background is the 30s of the 20th century, when "political corruption in the United States has reached the businessmen" and even spread to prisons. In the story of the Chongpai, Andy, a young banker who is sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of his wife and her lover, is denied a revelation due to the corruption of the prison, and instead suffers all kinds of mental and physical torture in Shawshank Prison. However, Andy was not ruined by the tragic fate, and after more than 20 years of tireless digging like drops of water, he finally climbed out of a 500-yard long sewage pipe on a thunderstorm night, regained his freedom, and lived the life of a free man on the coast of Mexico.
Tim Robbins profile.
Gender: Male. Date of birth: October 16, 1958. >>>More
The young banker was convicted of his own wife and sent to Shawshank Prison in the United States to be imprisoned for life. He looks cowardly on the outside, but he is determined on the inside, and from the day he goes to prison, he has decided that he must leave here. He met Morgan Feynman, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for manslaughter, in prison, and the two quickly became friends. >>>More
The content of the story is roughly as follows: >>>More
There must be something to learn from The Shawshank Redemption is a classic among the classics. >>>More