Submarine films are generally dull, and it is not easy to shoot high box office. Except for World War II, it is the Cold War submarine film. There is no one left. This film is about a KGB lunatic who wants to strike a pre-emptive strike on the US before the Soviet Union's nuclear missile superiority disappears, and let China take the blame. On paper, it looks like a good plan, but it actually serves the interests of the Soviet Union. However, some settings are not very strict. The setting of this film: First, the United States already has an overwhelming technological advantage over the Soviet Union in nuclear strikes; second, China and the United States are still in hostile relations, and the relationship between China and the Soviet Union is unclear whether it is good or bad (because the Soviet Union in the film Willing to sell to China a conventional submarine capable of launching nuclear bombs). Third, the United States did not strike a pre-emptive strike against the Soviet Union for some unknown reason (perhaps it was because of the high morals of the Americans, who in the film did praise the United States sideways through the captain’s mouth); fourth, the junior officers of the KGB actually fired Nuclear missile decision power, and the captain is still in the dark. Then, in this case, the Soviet Union can only survive by attacking the United States first, and let the United States think that the Chinese did it, and the destruction of the world is hanging by a thread.
In fact, the reality is that even today, the U.S. missile defense system cannot be said to be immune to the ballistic missiles of China and Russia. Furthermore, during the Cold War, China’s nuclear force was not comparable to that of the United States. One part, for the United States, "ghosts are harmless", doesn't China have the self-knowledge to launch a nuclear bomb on the United States? Looking for death? This trap is not easy for the United States to fall for. Also, what was the Soviet nuclear attack procedure like? Without the order of the General Secretary and the Politburo and the Supreme Soviet? How much power does the KGB have? Two KGB junior officers can decide the occurrence of a nuclear war? Selling to China a submarine capable of launching nuclear bombs is even more bizarre. We know that even today, Russia would not sell China's nuclear submarine technology, and it was even more impossible during the Cold War. In the Cold War, mutual assurance of destruction was a very deep learning, and the world has been trembling with this terrifying balance for decades, but the United States has various plans to deal with a nuclear crisis. America recruited?
The film is completely incompatible with
In comparison, the background music and rhythm control are much worse, the logic is a bit confusing, and there is nothing noble and moral or human. The struggle between the two factions and the struggle for national interests gives people a far-fetched feeling. Submarine gives People feel very backward, tattered, almost all manual operation, and the shape is much worse than the American submarine in the film, the shape of the American submarine in the film is very smooth. After watching it for a few minutes, I knew that it was only one step away from the bad movie, just because China was mentioned in it, so I watched it on my own. However, Harris' performance is still good. Now Harris likes to play an old man's temperament. In the film, he quietly praises the United States, but degrades the Soviet Union a little, and plays the role of a stopper. Heroes of the World Nuclear War. I'm wondering why he refused to play Rommel, but was willing to take this shitty film? David Du Nichu has always played a good man, but this time he played an extreme lunatic. Also, can the United States stop talking about Russia. It seems that in many American films, Russia is the villain, and nuclear weapons are important props. Is it really so attractive to be the villain of Russian Mao? I don't know how Russians will feel when they see an English-speaking Russian played by an American.
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