Since the two leading actors are both very favorite actors, it is a subjective recommendation. In the process of watching the movie, the two people got along with each other in the opposite scene, and I couldn't help but think of "Mrs. Smith". Marion is definitely an acting school, earnestly performing the role of the war female spy, exuding her charming female charm, but the sense of CP of these two people in the play can't be compared with the Smiths. Both of them are serious about their love for each other, but it seems that this love is not well integrated in the movie and has a chemical reaction.
When Marion was in Casablanca, she had already planned to get close to Pete, then get married and have children together, the equivalent of German spies breaking into the British interior. When she knew that she was exposed, the explanation given was that the child had to be threatened only when she was threatened. This is her explanation to Pete's psychological comfort. Pete may not want to investigate the truth of it. He really loves her and takes risks for her. He helped him kill the so-called people who were dangerous to their children. Perhaps this was the aftermath problem that Marion knew that she had to solve after exposure. After all, the consequences of not letting the V department catch the spy would be unimaginable. In the end, she simply and decisively ended herself as a spy. literacy.
She is an excellent spy and puts her true feelings into every action, but her true feelings will not let her emotionally disturb her professionalism. This she told Pete from the beginning.
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