During the investigation by the intelligence agencies, Diana was sent to get close to the terrorist leader. I don't understand, why the whole task should be given to a summer vacation student who has no experience? Although she ended up intercepting the bomb carrier, it was done well.
Realism is strong. The opening chapter cites some footage and news reports about al-Qaeda, as well as fake images stitched together with the real thing. Especially some of the scenes that shake during the chase, the life situation of al-Qaeda, act like the real thing.
There are also two newcomers to Al Qaeda who describe their fears in the future very carefully.
In the end, detectives tracked down the bomb carrier at the airport.
The storyline is not complicated, the story is told from start to finish, there is no very special climax. However, the portrayal of the characters' psychology is very good, and they try to make the story feel real. There is a line in the last subtitle: "After the 9/11 incident in 2001, the French intelligence agencies have prevented XX times (the numbers are not clear) terrorist attacks in time. "
So, it's not a parody of secret agents in the usual sense, but just a story about an intelligence agency. The only thing I'm not satisfied with is that I specially chose a novice with no experience to complete the whole task, how dangerous it is~~ It's too unreliable. But later, I understood Jeremy's intentions. . .
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