Personally, I think the biggest advantage of the film is that the story is told neatly and clearly. The Jewish girl Rachel and her family were helped by others to take a ship to escape the control of the German army. As a result, the ship was attacked by the German army. Except for Rachel, all the others were killed, so the girl was determined to take revenge. Join the underground resistance organization, in order to get revenge, successfully approached the Nazi officer Muntz with beauty.
The above episodes are generally guessable by the audience, so in my opinion that's just a big background. The story only gets better when Rachel learns that the man who persuaded her and her family to escape by boat was actually dealing with Nazi officer Franken, devising escape traps and looting wealthy Jewish properties together.
It's like playing a detective game. After a boss dies, there is another big boss. The plot is very compact but not messy. In the end, Rachel sealed the enemy who had wronged him in a coffin, just like his own escape method.
The heroine's performance was great. Seeing the face of the enemy pretending to be laughter, and learning that the expression of pain and depression after the death of Munts (Rachel later fell in love with Munts), sometimes well-behaved, sometimes sexy, sometimes determined and tenacious. And that scene of being drenched in feces made me admire the professionalism of the heroine.
The erotic scenes used as gimmicks when the film was released were nothing special, don't expect to see scenes similar to the classics in "Instinct". But the interlocking plot can attract people to keep watching.
War makes everything change so fast, you are a hero one second, but a sinner the next. Misunderstanding and betrayal are so common. And hatred turned the victims of the war into the perpetrators after the war, just like the coalition troops who poured excrement on Rachel's head. In this they are almost like the Nazis, doing this inhumane thing in the guise of justice as a judge.
View more about Black Book reviews