The Whistleblower: The Evolution of a Lie

Bonnie 2022-03-21 09:02:24

The content of the film is not the kind of highly watchable entertainment film that is warm and romantic, light-hearted, funny or tense. The movie viewing experience is a bit of a brain-burning experience. However, it is indeed a good film, not an ordinary product. It is not ordinary people who can make such a movie.

The advancement of each scene of the plot and the precise voice-over of the male protagonist form an absurd black humor style. The male protagonist is a believer who exercises the mind with one heart and two purposes. In real life, he uses two personalities anytime and anywhere. He plays his destined social role in the real world, and acts as his own boss in the spiritual world of the voice-over, watching and complaining. , ridicule, self-defense, brain supplement, trial, decision-making...

Damon Shuaiguo has subverted the classic image of a cool guy. He is slightly fat, stocky, honest and simple like a mediocre uncle on the street. Of course, everything he does is a big deal. There is never a lack of words, a fact that is hard to distinguish between true and false, there are n unwarranted Easter eggs behind an easter egg, it depends on whether you have the fate to discover it, do you say surprise or surprise or fright? Although the male protagonist's criminal concept violates legal principles, it is Without losing reason, he has his own set of value orientations, so he has always held his head high in unbelievable righteousness: those who steal hooks kill those who steal the country and become princes! They have been three years and I have been nine years. Where is the law of heaven, injustice, injustice, dissatisfaction, dissatisfaction? ️ The final distinction between 950 and 1150 is simply a stroke of genius. This is the perpetual motion machine created by lies - Mark's deity!

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Extended Reading

The Informant! quotes

  • Mark Whitacre: I read this study in Time magazine when I was at Cornell, which is an Ivy League school, and there were people, including my mother, who never believed I would make it into an Ivy League school. Maybe Ginger, who I met in marching in the eighth grade. And the study said people had nice, sympathetic feelings about people who were adopted, and treated them better. So I made up this adoption story, and people *did* treat me better. And when I got a job, one of my professors told people at Ralston Purina that I was this amazing guy that had accomplished all this in spite of being adopted. And so it was really *other* people who spread the story, not me. Although I admit it was wrong to start it and everything, it was other people who kept it going, even the people at ADM.

  • Mark Whitacre: Mark Whitacre, secret agent 0014.

    Rusty Williams: Why 0014?

    Mark Whitacre: Cause I'm twice as smart as 007.