It is rare to see so many f-word British movies.
This British minister is really unlucky enough and dedicated enough. He was still dominating world events in Washington yesterday. He will return to his rural constituency the next day to deal with trivial matters such as septic tanks and the outer walls of the voter service office. He was even scolded by the staff at No. 10 Downing Street. The foreign secretary was pointed at by another staff member's nose slamming.
Of course, there are more powerful roles than the staff of the Prime Minister's Office, that is, the senior military officer of the Pentagon, the head of the State Department, and even the 22-year-old intern of the White House.
The former boss empire can only play the role of the little boy next to the gang boss. It can be said that the evening scene is bleak. It’s just that the most miserable thing is the people of war countries. What determines their fate may be the anti-war sex of two young assistants who have just graduated from prestigious universities, or the classical music tracks that a dignitary is listening to recently. , Or a report that has been tampered with in the aisle of the UN building within half an hour. . . . . .
Very real, vivid and violent.
Behind every glamorous story are countless primitive, bitter, and dirty details.
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