Breakin' All the Rules

Breakin' All the Rules 5.6

You have to say that Jamie Fox is a genius, and this time he is really a lucky guy, even if he doesn't play a genius. Quincy (Jamie Fox) is a good man, he sees it that way, and most of the people around him hold the same attitude. However, it seems that the world only wants others to be good people, while they should be more cunning in order to make a small profit or something. Good people often have no substantial advantage in love, so they always keep company with fate and suffering, and Quincy is lucky to play such a role because he was abandoned by his girlfriend. The bustling flow of people is a big sight that the people in the metropolis are proud of, and if a company only has restless people but does not create the relevant benefits, the boss's head will sooner or later be delusional. This time Quincy's boss, Philip (Peter McNick), apparently has this tendency, instructing Quincy to fire 15% of its employees. For this typical scapegoat role, our honest hero also has a sense of justice, the natural consequence is that there is no good fruit to eat. The theorem of "frustration in love, success in career" doesn't seem to make sense here, and pain and anger always need to be vented, no matter.

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