Rare heroine reasoning drama

Berneice 2022-10-27 20:15:49

To be honest, I thought it was a group drama before watching it, but I didn't expect the shots to be distributed quite a bit. However, the plot is as exciting as I imagined, and that's enough.

spoiler divider


figure

Susan: The heroine, married with a son and a daughter, is good at deciphering and analyzing intelligence. After the war, she succumbed to plainness and became a housewife, but she was obviously not reconciled to such plainness and was willing to contribute to the world. Her character manifested in Bletchley: taking intelligence from information, discovering patterns and trusting her own judgment.

Millie: Unmarried, brave and enthusiastic, sociable. Truly a lively and cheerful woman who ventured alone after the war, traveled the world, convened the Bletchley group, and fired her sexually harassing boss. Her communication skills are almost at full level. Wen Neng clears the relationship to get smuggled items, Wu Neng visits and investigates to obtain information, and makes calls frantically.

Jane: It should be the boss of Bletchley Park, a well-connected, serious and dogmatic person. Interestingly, when the German intelligence was found to be different, Susan believed in her own judgment but did not have the confidence to report it to her superior. It was Jane who encouraged her to report it; after the war, Susan said, "We can find him (the murderer)", but Jane said, "This is not the case. We can handle it." Essentially, Susan was right, it was the same thing they did at Bletchley, but Jane didn't think so. Obviously, in wartime they have superiors to report to, and in peacetime there are police investigations. Jane's heart is inclined to obey and obey the role of society. But once she thinks it's her job to do it, she'll try to solve it by any means, even by extraordinary means.

Lucy: Married, youngest girl, unforgettable, walking database. She had been used as bait to try to lure snakes out of their holes.

Timothy: Susan's husband, who served in World War II, was a colleague with the Inspector. Timothy's performance in the play is remarkable. At first, Susan tried to find the police through her husband's relationship and provide them with clues. Timothy has shown a clear distrust of this and has clearly expressed his disapproval, but he still has a chance for his wife. After the information was wrong, he expressed uncontrollable irritability about his wife's obsession. Combined with what he said to Susan, "maybe all the excitement has been experienced in the war", it can be seen that he was fed up with the wandering and uncertain of war (perhaps PTSD), I just want a peaceful life. Timothy doesn't know his wife's talents and really doesn't think she can do anything. After an unpleasant quarrel with Susan over the case reasoning, he coaxed "I'll try to find you the hardest puzzle book"; I hope Susan can be a good mother and don't care about the mess; very arrogant. But he is also doing his best to accommodate his wife. He is happy for his wife to have a smile, Aiwu and Wudi care about his wife 's friends, maintain his trust in his wife, and try to meet her requirements even if he thinks his wife is whimsical. This is the power of love. Although it is not as perfect as imagined, he tries his best to do the best.

View more about The Bletchley Circle reviews