Whether you understand it or not, this movie is a challenge

Adelbert 2022-03-22 09:02:11

Exquisite structure, excellent acting skills, suspense running through, how can such a drama not look good?
It's good-looking, really good-looking, but it's too challenging for the audience's emotions.
If you are not interested in this long dialogue, there is no doubt that most viewers only care about how to shake off the burden at the end (if you are still interested in watching it), and finally see the ending, or regret that you should watch it carefully, or think you should Take another look, or think it's okay, the movie is not bad.
If you are interested in the ubiquitous details of the film, then this film is a bit too demanding, since Dimon is lying from beginning to end, and it is an interlocking big lie, as a serious and careful audience. It is too difficult to carefully smooth out the entire context without the help of paused recall.
Admittedly I can't suggest a better way to shoot it, but the way the film is done is destined to be a lot of detail that the audience will ignore intentionally or unintentionally, and a considerable number of viewers will fall asleep in the first 15 minutes of the film.
But after all, Dimon has proved, and also proved that he is not necessarily just the agent who is flying and hoarding the ground. He can still interpret such a person who is full of lies in such a way that he has no power but is thoughtful. A dead fat man who you will never take a second glance at when you pass by.
Finally, I thought about this question: If you play tricks on the whole world and crash into millions by the way, what kind of mentality will you have when you go to prison?
"It must be complicated, but not necessarily all negative emotions" I thought at the time.

View more about The Informant! reviews

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.