The twelfth day of isolation. I heard the music of this play in Xiami Music very early, it was very impressive, and then I had the desire to watch it. The filming of this drama is very realistic. There are no high-altitude stunts, no flying over the walls, no super weapons, and tells us that the so-called agents are also human, but more real. Of course, there is a problem with spy films, which is to over-humanize enemy tools, but the style of the 1960s is still more practical than later spy films. This kind of World War II spy film Black Germany is really a tradition. German soldiers are either rigid or insidious, while the British agents are witty and smart. If they lose the battle, they can't make the movie. The real climax of the play was actually achieved in the confrontation and reversal of several characters in the castle. The next fifty minutes are basically set up to complete the plot, but it seems to be a dog-tailed climax. At the end, there is another small climax in the plot on the plane. The German spy chief in the UK. Having said that, is this kind of plot mirroring the fact that there are no five people in Cambridge? On the other hand, major national events are also taken advantage of. If Flying Eagle Castle does not covet the beauty of the British female spy and lure she-wolves into the house, then there will be nothing wrong with the male protagonists. The truth of "Cheating by Deception" is actually more than folk petty theft.
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