Most of the wonderful highlights and pitfalls have been pointed out by friends in other long reviews, so I won't repeat them here. I will talk about a place that has been more or less ignored by everyone.
The image of the Chinese agent in the play.
One thing to say, in the previous episode, the screen of the press conference of the Ministry of Defense appeared, and I was still looking forward to it. I thought that in this "Korean cool film" there are also plots that can make the Chinese feel immersed, so even if I talk to Li Junping (the main character in the play) several times later on the phone, I speak this "Korean Chinese" (big This is the case with the Chinese that appear in some Korean dramas).
But this? ? Too dramatic, right?
By the end of the firefight I wasn't particularly convinced it was a Chinese agent.
The American soldiers who exchanged fire on the other side were at least fully armed.
Not to mention that it was a Chinese soldier, and even thought it was a nearby underworld hooligan who picked up a few 95s and pretended to be——
Perhaps this is the stereotyped image of the Chinese military in the minds of some Koreans-too simplistic and one-sided.
However, the attitude towards the U.S. military in the play is indeed very dark. Perhaps it is because of the relationship between the United States and South Korea that the image of the U.S. military is so "three-dimensional".
In addition, the whole film is not bad as a whole. I personally think that the plot arrangement is also relaxed and moderate. In the end, there is also a happy ending that reaches the political correctness in Korean dramas. Except for the above-mentioned slot that is more dramatic, I personally think that it does not exist. Excessively inappropriate .
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