Chinese storyline insults audience IQ

Nicholaus 2022-03-21 09:01:44

Wonderful story Huge bugs that make the audience unable to watch the show. The protagonist pretends to be a doctor who infiltrated a Chinese prison in the 1990s to help with the cholera vaccine? At that time, China was fully capable of preventing and treating this infectious disease, and it also sent medical personnel and volunteers to Africa to provide international assistance, not to mention the economically developed Suzhou, which is a job that an ordinary city-level epidemic prevention station nurse can easily do. When will it be my turn to go abroad? Doctor involved? $282,000 to pay officials to black out power in Suzhou for half an hour? Any official with normal IQ in China would not dare to do this kind of thing, let alone a foreign ambassador who is involved in foreign military operations. The Suzhou officials are also very wealthy. Would they really do this kind of thing that demands money or death? This plot insults China The integrity and IQ of the officials, the power outage in Suzhou, the American helicopters are like entering a no-man’s land to precisely rescue the protagonist and the woman, and that sentence insults the audience’s IQ and insults the defense capabilities of the Chinese navy, air force and security. so fake so fake

What's the difference between this and other plots like Tear the Devil?

Once it's too fake, the audience will come out and have no desire to "appreciate" the movie. At most, they "watch" the movie out of curiosity.

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Extended Reading

Spy Game quotes

  • Tom Bishop: She's just someone I used to get to the camp.

    Nathan Muir: She gonna be of any more use to us?

    Tom Bishop: Not to us.

  • Dr. Ahmed: [preparing him for him to help with their next op] Tell me. Is it hard?

    Tom Bishop: Is what hard?

    Dr. Ahmed: Is it hard? To take a life?

    Tom Bishop: [Long pause after a sigh] Yes.