The media briefing is sensational enough: "Five beautiful and mysterious women with unique skills have formed a super special task force. They are going to perform a stunning operation. What kind of difficulties and dangers will they face? ..."
Then, just because one of the agents was once the lover of the Nazi officer, and only because they planned to let the two meet again and then start, the media titled the film the French version of Lust Caution (previously The "Black Book" is again the German version of Lust Caution). They completely ignored the fact that she wanted to emphasize, that is, "I fell in love with Germans and not Nazis", ignored her unbearableness when facing her former lover with a gun, ignored her final death, and what was even more funny was that (Sina) They even intercepted photos of them changing their clothes and added them with a commentary on "beautiful temptation". But everyone who has watched it knows that the whole film has no dew point in the true erotic sense, let alone sex scenes!
Under such a tone, the media adopted a (male) spectator perspective. The shooting, pretending to be nurses, hiding, and observing by these female agents became a game of life and death, bleeding, and sadness. , Exhausted and so on. At the end, it seems that I have to use the classic line in "Red Cliff": "Don't make trouble."
It can’t be said that this is a classic film. We can cite many shortcomings. For example, the plot is too hasty, many explanations are not clear, and the final assassination still seems too easy to succeed (of course Jane paid a heavy price), but I still Five stars are to be given. When we are out of national pride, out of an anti-war stance, out of humiliation in mind, we want to search for scripts and spend film, please also give a shot to those women in war. At least, the war in this film caused Louis to lose her husband, brother, and unborn child. The war destroyed Susie's once beautiful love. It may also be that the war forced Jeanne to become a prostitute and the war took their young lives.
However, this is by no means a movie that complains of pain. I like the young faces on the posters and their firm eyes; I like the black video at the beginning of the film, which records the most real life of women at the time. With a long trumpet, they look so brave. The southern women in "Gone with the Wind" initially sent their husbands and lovers to the battlefield with their love for the South, and when they were defeated in the South, they still opened their arms and proudly welcomed the ragged soldiers returning.
We all love peace, but it is already a blasphemy of peace to modify a film about women and war into a mixture of sex and violence.
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