Suddenly I remembered that I was watching "Kangxi Has Come". In order to show that she had a taste for watching movies, the female guest said that her favorite movie was "Munich", and the audience was full of admiration. Someone asked, since you like this movie so much, which country is Munich in?
Uh, France?
As a Jewish Spielberg, he may have a sense of mission to make Jewish films. He made the unparalleled "Schindler's List". He cried and said that he could not make "The Pianist", and he made it again. This "Munich" is related to the Jews.
"Munich" tells about the tragic incident in which Palestinian terrorists kidnapped Israeli hostages during the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany, and both the hostages and the terrorists died together. At the beginning of the film, Spielberg explains this very quickly, focusing on the revenge of the two countries after that.
When explaining the incident, Spielberg switched to different countries to watch the same TV show with different reactions. The Israeli audience cried and the Palestinians laughed, making it seem like a grim movie.
Shortly after the opening, the Prime Minister of Israel was very angry and expressed that he would use violence to control violence, so he decided to launch a terrorist attack and assassinate the leaders of twelve Palestinian terrorist organizations. To this end, she convened a small team, canceled their identities, and gave them unlimited financial support, making people think that it might be a 007-like movie.
The protagonist was chosen as the captain because he was so ordinary that no one had ever heard of him. He was assigned four team members, each with their own strengths, which made it feel like a movie like "Eleven Arhats".
When the protagonist killed the first time, he was trembling and raised his gun several times; when he killed the second person, in order to avoid accidentally killing her daughter, he ran to the blaster to stop him, but the more he went on, the more unscrupulous he was, killing the bodyguards and affecting the civilians. , and chased the Netherlands to kill another killer, making it seem like it might be telling a story about a man who lost himself.
Spielberg then talked about the fact that the members of the team were murdered one by one, and the team members themselves began to question whether they were righteous, which made people think that he might start talking about the nature of war.
But interspersed with the French informant may be a double agent, so "Infernal Affairs"? Having dinner with the informant's "father", the other party said that you are for your own family, and I forgive you for lying Small family relationships, such as "The English Patient"? The protagonist offered to quit after killing him, but he suspected that he and his family were being hunted down by his own country, so you were imitating "Bourne Bourne"? The protagonist killed someone and couldn't sleep well. During the intercourse, there was a scene of terrorists killing people, so you are paying tribute to "The Deer Hunter"?
And what is the finale? And a plethora of unscrupulously designed and totally ingenious assassinations? The streets are full of witnesses and the fingerprints of dead bodies, are you kidding me?
To sum it up, this movie is so substandard that after watching it for three hours, I don't know what Spielberg is going to say? The most exciting thing is that he took pictures in various European countries, which is quite like a travel film, but when dealing with such serious issues as Palestine and Israel, is it really okay for you not to be so serious?
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