This question needs to be supplemented with questions such as is it currently one side that will not move, or both sides. Is it currently in the early stages of a facelift, or has it been six months since the facelift was performed on the frontal area, or the lateral area of the face. If you are in the early stages of a frontal facelift, it is normal for your forehead to be immobile. Because the frontal area is pulled tighter, the eyebrows will also appear to be unable to move. However, if after six months, the eyebrows are still unable to move, you need to consider whether there is nerve damage, and go to the hospital to do some electromechanical point examination. If there is no forehead facelift, but only face side, temporal lifting of these directions, in the early postoperative period can be temporarily observed, if after a month of movement is still not obvious, you need to ask their own surgeon about the operation, whether there is muscle damage. However, muscle damage tends to be unilateral, and there will not be a situation where both eyebrows will not move. Doctors are very careful when performing a facelift for fear of damaging a nerve. Because the nerves are so close to the skin, it is easy to create a pulling injury when peeling, which can affect the movement of the facial nerves after surgery. However, traction damage often recovers over time, usually as quickly as a month or as slowly as a year or so. Candidates can promote the recovery of the nerve through the cooperation of acupuncture and physical therapy, if it is six months later and still have problems, then you need to consider whether it is no longer possible to recover. For post-operative problems, it is generally recommended to consult one’s surgeon, as he knows the most about the intra-operative situation, while other surgeons, in general, can only give some ambiguous judgments based on their own experience, and are unable to accurately analyze the situation.