Opening, near the Berlin Wall. British agents are waiting for Limmat. The person who appeared was shot after passing the level.
The male protagonist was taken to talk to the control, and it seems that after the failure of the action, he will be dismissed. The male protagonist was unwilling to accept it, and controlled the male protagonist to spend more time in the cold.
The male protagonist was depressed, took a semi-relief job from the government, entered a small library, met the female protagonist, and started loveline.
The heroine is a party member, which is a key clue.
The male protagonist was arrested for hurting people after drinking. After he was released, a man who was turned into a "queer" by the male protagonist appeared, intending to turn against him.
Queer took the male protagonist to a strip club to meet a man. After the man chased the queer away, he talked to the protagonist about the plan. It seems that this person and the male protagonist actually know each other. In other words, the queer is the enemy's person, and the bar person is his own.
After that, the male protagonist went to connect with the control, and there was a person named Smilely, and there was not much space. At this time, it was discovered that the previous decadence and sinking were just acting, and the male protagonist deliberately pretended to be depressed to attract the prey to the bait. The next step is to follow the plan. Control makes the male protagonist pretend to join the enemy, and by providing clues, the enemy can kill each other and kill their traitor Monte with the help of a Jewish knife. Control asked the male protagonist what he thought of Monte, and the male protagonist hated it.
All went well and the male protagonist was taken to Holland. At this time, smilely also appeared, and there was a strange smile on the shuttle bus at the airport. I don't understand a bit here. Is he going to confirm that the male protagonist has arrived in the Netherlands?
When the male protagonist was "reporting work" with the contact person in the Netherlands, the secretary brought a newspaper with the revelation of looking for the male protagonist. Unexpected. Because I didn't really understand it, I could only guess according to my own understanding: the original plan was for the male protagonist to go to the enemy in his personal capacity in exchange for money. So when he arrived in the Netherlands, he was reminded by customs that his passport was only two weeks old, and he felt completely in control to complete the mission and return to the UK safely. And after he saw that he was "wanted", he obviously realized that something beyond his control had happened, and he could no longer return to the UK as originally planned.
Because of passport problems, he was transferred to East Germany, the stronghold of the enemy. After the Jewish Federer appeared, he began to carry out according to the original plan of the male protagonist-he gave the Jewish information, and the Jews put it together by themselves, intending to "frame" Monte and ascend to the post.
During the period, Smilely went to the heroine, but did not expand the specific content. The next day, the hostess asked the leader for leave and wanted to go to East Germany to participate in the activities of the party branch. Here is another foreshadowing.
After the male protagonist and the Jews returned from a trip, they found that Monte had killed him. Monte seized power, even arresting the Jews.
After Monte's assault on the man, while he was being tried, the Jews suddenly broke in, and a formal trial began to accuse Monte of being a spy. At first, the Jew first stated that everything was carried out according to the original plan of the male protagonist. Although the male protagonist testified in court, he did not accuse Monte, and even fell into the arms of the Jews.
When it was Montefang's turn to plead, the lawyer summoned the heroine. The confused heroine was stupid and naive. She said everything that should be said and should not be said. In the end, Monte was whitewashed, and the Jews stole the chicken without losing the rice. The male and female protagonists were also locked up.
When the male protagonist was imprisoned, he heard the cell door being secretly opened, so he ran out of the dungeon and found that Monte was waiting for him. At this time, the truth came out. Monte was actually a spy arranged by the British in East Germany. In fact, the smart Jew was right, but no one believed him later. Of course, it's all controlled arrangements.
When the male lead knew that Monte was a teammate, I don't know. Is it a meet up? When Monte arraigned him, gave him a glass of whisky to imply him? Color exchange after court hearing? Or the last time to escape? Or have you always known? I don't think I should have known it at first.
Why shoot the heroine at the end, my understanding is that she knows too much, she has lost her role. Therefore, women, love, is not worth it!
As for the male protagonist's final choice, is it the brilliance of human nature? Or does he think that he is actually the same as the heroine, a chess piece controlled by the control, and it is actually a dead end when he goes back? It is possible that he was not the young man who shot the heroine, but someone who was patrolling in East Germany. It may also be a young man, because he feels that falling into the hands of the enemy will lead to the final exposure of everything.
The above is a summary of the plot, and I slowly figured out the ins and outs. What I didn't understand before, seems to be clear by writing it out. The brilliant point of the film should be the setting of spy in spy. The music and photography are great too, but there's something deeper, ideological, that I can't analyze.
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