Good sense of age

Isac 2022-04-19 09:01:26

Set in 1963 during the Cold War, the film begins with Gaby Teller (Alicica Vikander), a German female auto mechanic whose father is a nuclear weapons expert. U.S. CIA agent Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) is forced into missions because of his past crimes, while Soviet National Security Council agent Illya Kuryakin (Amy Hammer) is constantly trying to shake off her father's shame as a corrupt man feel. Solo and Kuryakin set their sights on the same target: Gaby Teller, because they both suspect her father is being used by the Nazis and may be helping a terrorist group build nuclear weapons. Two people who are eager to make achievements want to grab the first prize, first find this secret organization, so they run against each other, but they each receive a notification from their superiors that the two of you need to cooperate to complete this task. The two top agents from the Soviet Union and the United States cooperated to find people for warheads, and the dialogue was funny and light comedy.

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Extended Reading
  • Lukas 2022-03-20 09:01:19

    It's pretty, smooth, and hearty, and it's all sorts of things to do, but the country hasn't introduced it, so it's nothing.

  • Coleman 2022-03-20 09:01:19

    The surprise work of 2015 is more funny and retro than the "Confused Detective" of the year. Full of all kinds of stalks in spy movies, a lot of old spy movies have been hacked. Everyone thinks that the plot is not deliberate, so don't you see that the laser comes out when you cut the wire fence? Of course, on the whole, it’s worse than "Ace Agent", the ending is still too rushed and not easy enough (but the ship bombing stage is still very handsome).

The Man from U.N.C.L.E. quotes

  • Illya Kuryakin: [as Solo cracks a safe] Did you disable the alarm?

    Napoleon Solo: There's no alarm on the 307.

    [alarm immediately begins wailing]

    Illya Kuryakin: ...Loving your work, Cowboy.