More than just love and rants

Esmeralda 2022-03-25 09:01:12

British people's complaints about politics are very funny, and they are more restrained about the helplessness of the bureaucracy. Almost every sentence of the press spokesman is a stalk. In some scenes, the traces are still a little heavier.
The good thing is that most of the plot doesn't go against common sense. The fishermen objected to taking 10,000 salmon, so they had to think of other ways. The flash-like plot turns are abrupt and too old-fashioned. There are two main plots that forcefully highlight the drama. One is the soldier's resurrection and the two of them meet in Yemen, and the other is the sentence "It's in your DNA". Everything else is relatively smooth.
British films have 007-style big scenes, and the depiction of armed conflict in this film is more restrained. One is to assassinate the chief, and the other is to open the floodgates. It can be seen that the screenwriters of the film production and production have intentions other than light comedy. The ending at the end of the film, except for the ending for the end, the chief said "there are no bad guys, I want too much", seems to be more able to show the gist of the movie. That is change.
Driven by the love line and the Tucao line, the political and religious line still has a strong sense of existence. Considering that the United Kingdom is deeply involved in the situation in the Middle East, this film has a role in enhancing the British public's understanding of the Middle East. In the local area, emily does not need to wrap the headscarf, while the local women are very tightly wrapped. The chief's remarks at the launching ceremony were clearly addressing the locals and the West. The salmon that jumped out of the water at the end is not only a symbol of the continuation of love, but also a sign that the change of the chief will continue.
Casually speaking, the order is a little messy, and the words are incomprehensible, and are for reference only.

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Extended Reading

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen quotes

  • Dr. Alfred Jones: Did you get my email?

    Bernard Sugden: Yes. What did it say?

    Dr. Alfred Jones: Took the meeting. Waste of time as predicted. Now if you don't mind I'll get back to my work.

    Bernard Sugden: Dr. Jones.

    [holds up a document which Dr. Jones takes]

    Dr. Alfred Jones: What is this?

    Bernard Sugden: P45.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: I'm sorry. I don't, I don't understand.

    Bernard Sugden: Oh, well, a P45 is the official document given to an employee when his services are no longer required by his or her employer.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: Yes, but Bernard, this has got my...

    Bernard Sugden: Or, you can sign this letter stating that you are delighted to assign yourself exclusively to the Yemeni salmon fishing project with immediate effect. Up to you.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: But Bernard, you know as well as I do this thing is a bloody joke. Where the hell you gonna get salmon that far...

    Bernard Sugden: [interrupts and taps the P45] Just there.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: This is blackmail Sugden. This is a bloody outrage.

    Bernard Sugden: Fitzharris & Price will be paying your salary while on secondment. Almost double what it is now. I'd say that's a bloody outrage.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: Double. Can I have time to think about this?

    Bernard Sugden: Nope.

    Dr. Alfred Jones: Can I borrow your pen?

    Bernard Sugden: Yah. It's my special one with the italic nib.

    [Dr. Jones grabs it, scribbles his signature on the P45 and storms out]

  • Tom Price-Williams: Have you any idea what an outcry there'd be if the Environment Agency stripped British rivers of *ten thousand* salmon and shipped them off to the effing Yemen?

    Bernard Sugden: Well how many can you spare?

    Tom Price-Williams: None! Christ! Bernard. Anglers, they're obsessive crazies. You think Al-Qaeda are a threat, think again mate! I've seen a fly fisherman wade into a river and try and drown a canoeist just for passing by in a Day-Glo jacket. You haven't got a hope in hell of getting these fish from British rivers.