The least understands the ambiguity of Chief Tanaka, and Junko is the lover of American spy Connor, understands Paul's identity as an American spy, understands Anna's identity, and let them go when they leave Shanghai. When Junko died, he told Paul that he didn't think Connor was just an American businessman, and seemed to blame himself for not getting the information before the attack on Pearl Harbor, giving me the feeling that he was also an American spy. But if he's an American spy, he doesn't understand why he's executing Connor and Paul's informant again.
The ambiguity between Paul and the German woman could have been clearly understood as the ambiguity between men and women, but she saw that Paul secretly photographed her husband's documents, and then avoided it vaguely and inexplicably, without any result. So German women are even more ambiguous.
Lan Ting is the boss of the underworld. At the last moment, when Tanaka wanted to hijack Anna, no thugs left the factory. In order to protect Anna, Lan Ting started the attack with a gun. As the boss, he didn't kill Tanaka, but he died instead. Entrust Anna to Paul well before leaving, without losing the demeanor of the boss. It's just that the boss didn't want Tanaka's life, whether there is some ambiguity in it, I don't understand.
The English name is SHANGHAI, but I don't understand why it is so vulgar that it is called "Spy Sea Wind and Rain" in Chinese. The two words "fengyun" are also ambiguous.
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