Politicians never do serious things

Gayle 2022-01-02 08:02:16

British Secretary of State Simon is a fool. When he was interviewed, he short-circuited his brain and said a nonsense that he didn't understand. This nonsense touched the nerves of some high-level leaders. He was invited to participate in various anti-war opinions. Meetings with unpredictable meaning, and snowballed out more nonsense... He himself and his assistants also began to enter the so-called inner circle, throwing themselves into the political game of constant scrutiny.
Their worst plan was...the big deal, they fired consultant Judy.
A group of idiot politicians engaged in a self-righteous conspiracy. The anti-war movement naturally failed. Everyone stepped down. A new group of politicians came to power, and only Judy was still acting as an adviser to the government.
People complain about blocked pipes and collapsed courtyard walls. No one has ever wanted to repair them. Politicians never do serious things, they are scumbags who completely waste time and money-this is what the director wants to say.
It is said that some British people, especially Scots, speak the same way as in the movie. They speak fast, swear words, and acrimonious. They are not willing to confine themselves to words like f**k and sh*t. , Oblique metaphors and overwhelming idioms are necessary~~ This is the biggest feature of this movie, so some people like it too badly, and some people don’t understand it.

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Extended Reading
  • Dakota 2022-04-21 09:02:48

    According to incomplete statistics, the frequency of fuck, male genitalia and other kinds of swear words in the film is the highest in any British film. In an interview with a visiting class, Armando Lannucci was so frightened that the reporter almost ran away. .....

  • Elroy 2022-03-25 09:01:12

    Funny satire where everyone is a clown and plays their part in the farce. Regardless of love or hate.

In the Loop quotes

  • Lt. Gen. George Miller: [to Karen, about Linton Barwick] He's got his little cannons and he's got his little guns, and... This is the problem with civilians wanting to go to war. Once you've been there, once you've seen it, you never want to go again unless you absolutely fucking have to. It's like France.

  • Linton Barwick: My golly, I can't see why anyone would choose to work in a glass office, huh? Glass offices, in my opinion, are for perverts.

    Bob Adriano: I could request the glass be frosted.

    Linton Barwick: Frosting is on cakes, huh? Now, what else happened in London?

    Bob Adriano: Ah, generally positive, two glitches...

    Linton Barwick: Really, what?

    Bob Adriano: Karen flagged a report by one of her staffers. She's obviously trying to use it as some kind of roadblock. It's called PWIP PIP.

    Linton Barwick: PWIP what?

    Bob Adriano: PWIP PIP.

    Linton Barwick: What is it, a report on bird calls? What does it even stand for?

    Bob Adriano: I can't recall. It's factish. Intel for and against intervention.

    Linton Barwick: We have all the facts on this we need. We don't need any more facts. In the land of truth, my friend, the man with one fact is the king. You said there was something else, what is that?

    Bob Adriano: In the meeting with the Foreign Office, the committee was accidentally and briefly alluded to.

    Linton Barwick: Which committee?

    Bob Adriano: The...

    [quietly]

    Bob Adriano: The war committee, sir.

    Linton Barwick: All right, Karen is not to know about this, huh? She is an excitable, yapping she-dog. Get a hold of those minutes. I have to correct the record.

    Bob Adriano: We can do that?

    Linton Barwick: Yes, we can. Those minutes are an aide-memoire for us. They should not be a reductive record of what happened to have been said, but they should be more a full record of what was intended to have been said. I think that's the more accurate version, don't you?