Because the North Korean political situation in the film is suspicious, so it is respectful first: the North Korean military hawk Li is dissatisfied with the military strategy and political purge of the No. 1 figure, and wants to preemptively launch a coup d'etat, so that the special agent Yan goes to assassinate the No. 1 party member Park. However, Park and No. 1 secretly exchanged itineraries, Yan did not dare to take action, and No. 1 was almost killed by a pre-arranged missile (the missile was sent by an American armored vehicle intercepted by Li, this was to destroy the corpse and the trace, and the other was to blame the United States. ). Yan fled to South Korea with the injured No. 1, and accidentally fell into the hands of the Korean high-ranking Guo Zhi (the coincidence in this paragraph is a bit false). Yan lamented that the Korean and North Korean people are a family, and Yan and Guo have gradually become friends (the relationship between the two is also the soul of the film). Park controlled Pyongyang to declare war to the outside world (he thought the United States was going to attack), but secretly went to South Korea to negotiate (inquire about the situation and redeem No. 1), but was assassinated by Lee. Li officially took power in the dynasty, and even sent someone to assassinate No. 1, but was rescued by Yan (Yan also finally knew about Li's conspiracy at this time). Li first used a nuclear bomb to intercept the nuclear bomb launched by the United States (actually, it was launched to Japan and was intercepted by Japan, which indirectly destroyed the nuclear bomb of the United States), and then planned to use the second nuclear bomb to deal with South Korea, but was severely shot and killed by the returning home (Yan was always attacked by Li of trust and thus able to approach Lee). The film ends with both Korea and North Korea holding half of their nuclear weapons (that is, the horrific balance of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union).
That's it for the main line. Guo is basically not mentioned above. In fact, he and Yan have similar roles, and most of the time we follow the situation from his perspective, including the forces around him: China, the CIA, the current president of South Korea, the incoming South Korean The next president, etc. This film proves that South Korea can not only shoot real political struggles, but also the current affairs and history of YY. It can't be said that it is perfect, but it can be wonderful. Except for blaming the United States and No. 1 being captured, most of the other games are reasonable. Before I knew it, more than two hours passed, and I felt that if the director continued filming, I could watch it all night. Of course, it's true that "Iron Rain 2" is terrible, but that's a new story.
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