Thoughts about bin Laden

Katheryn 2022-04-21 09:01:25

About time: I once found a small object hanging on the door at a flea market in Houston, a deer-shaped iron ornament that said Gone deer hunting, be back at dark thirty, like an old Texas cowboy hanging in his home The message I left to my wife before I went out to hunt in the yard, and it was at that time that I knew the popular expression of dark thirty at 12:30 in the morning. The English name of "Hunting Bin Laden", Zero Dark Thirty, happened to be the time when SEAL Team 6 carried out this operation. Is this a coincidence? deer=Osama bin Laden?

On the death of bin Laden: How much does this matter mean to the American imperial people? Take a look at the whole episode in the news room to talk about this big event, take a look at Obama's use of it as a weapon to run for re-election, and take a look at his splendid achievements in office, and see how the filmmakers deliberately postponed the schedule until after the general election to avoid suspicion. I also asked some Americans how they reacted to the incident at the time. Most people said that the plot of the news room was not an exaggeration, and it was indeed a national celebration, although some people thought that celebrating the death of a certain person was almost humane.

About the director: Kathryn Bigelow, a 62-year-old woman, studied art. Her most famous work was The Hurt Locker, a manly film about the Iraq War. Many details are impressive. But what is more impressive should be the contrast between Bigelow's elegant femininity and the film's masculinity. I saw her accepting the award at the Oscars the year before, and her slender figure of 180 was wrapped in a light gold evening dress. The sleek, smooth blond hair falls naturally, and she speaks elegantly, elegantly, and smiles beautifully, which doesn't match her actual age at all. She married James Cameron at the age of 37 and divorced at the age of 39. Although the marriage was short-lived, It also helps her career a lot, just like Maggie Cheung to Olivier Assayas, Faye Wong to Dou Wei, marrying a talented man, even if the marriage is not long enough, you can benefit a lot from each other. Upgrading several ranks.

About screenwriter: Mark Pohl, also the screenwriter of the Hurt Locker, the golden partner of Catherine Bigelow. I had read the news, but this time the script is based on the declassified documents of the CIA, which truly restores the entire operation.

About the subject: Americans are very interested in Middle East political films, from in 2005 to the previous year to and this year. The power of control is inseparable. The powers of Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount, Universal, and DreamWorks are all in the hands of Jews, and the conflicts between Jews and Arabs have a long history. Their coveting, the hatred of ordinary people for 9/11, and any anti-Middle East themes became the main theme in their hearts. (How big is the social influence of Jews in the United States? Politically, there are more seats in the Senate than the Jewish population in the United States. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and the two-term Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan and Bernanke, as well as the super strength of the Jewish consortium, have produced The super lobbying power of Congress; The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Wall Street Post and the three major American TV networks ABC, CBS and NBC and Bloomberg are also completely in their hands, not to mention their financial technology business education. The resources occupied by the United States unconditionally support Israel, which is both the strategic layout of WASP in the Middle East and the same origin of the Jews, so it has never been inseparable with the two countries.)

About the movie: 1) This is not another <24 hours> with intense plot and climax, and it is definitely disappointing to watch it with this kind of mood. It's more like a documentary full of boring, trivial, frustrating, and frustrating details of life, technically not much post-processing, and even some shaky follow-up shots, so real that it's like you're standing there and witnessing the entire event. ; 2) Although the film is nearly three hours long, the place is not redundant. In the first three minutes of the film, the scene of the 911 incident is represented by a black screen and various background sounds mixed with noise, which will have a visual impact when you think it is time. When the big impact scene appeared, the screen directly switched to the Pakistani prisoner interrogation room; the details were not forgotten. Several long shots showing the customs of Pakistan, coupled with the background sound of Muslim prayers, can feel a kind of moment. Existing anxiety; 3) One of the highlights of this film is the execution of various extortionate confessions. It is said that inventing these executions requires talent and imagination, as well as various knowledge of physiology, psychology and medicine. Although the relevant departments in the United States have come forward to clarify that they have never used such exaggerated capital punishment in reality, according to our logic that denying is affirming and the world is as black as a crow, they should have done a lot. Among them, waterboarding is a punishment with a very high appearance rate. It is frequently used by relevant personnel in and <24 Hours>, covering the face with a towel and pouring water up, simulating a feeling of drowning. You can't survive, you can't die. It is said that in reality, CIA agents used 183 waterboards to get the clues to bin Laden's hiding from the terrorists. In addition to execution, interrogation is also a great skill. First of all, your aura cannot be lost to those fearful points that lick blood on the bullet and put life and death aside. Then you need to understand the weaknesses of human nature, understand grace and power, and you need to have judgment and confession The ability to be true and false is, in short, a high-tech type of work. Basically, the film also expresses the passage of time through the female protagonist's interrogation, from the panic at the beginning to the calmness in the middle to the cruelty in the later period.

It took 10 years to find the target, and this period must be a process full of frustrations. The first paragraph of the man yelled when he was the last time you saw Bin Laden? The boss scolded the action team, and the second female first vented after a long time of repression. I am the motherfucker who found the place, sir! It can make you really feel that the life of an agent is not at all. The tedious trivial frustration and occasional sense of achievement, the close-up of the female lead at the end of the film is very eye-catching, a kind of incomprehension after spending all the time and energy to finally complete the task, he killed them, we killed him, the only one I have in the past 10 years One thing to do is kill him, now that he's dead what can I do? Where can I go later? A line of clear tears directly made many people with shallow tears wet (wet...sweat) and directly sent her to the nomination of the Golden Man.

If it weren't for the particularity of this action, the whole process would be a portrayal of the life around us. It is the director's ideal to make the movie live, and the ideal of the diaosi to live the movie.

I read so much, but I didn't say good or bad. It's a matter of opinion. If you like 007/Spy: Impossible/die hard/Bonn, just stop. The immortal Xiaoqiang without special effects and the luxury car crashed into the gray machine. The bomb disposal unit can see the dust and hardships of the same realistic fan.

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Extended Reading

Zero Dark Thirty quotes

  • Dan: He's being a dick.

    Joseph Bradley: He's trying to outsmart you. Why don't you tell him about your Ph.D?

  • Dan: State your request.

    Maya: Move Heaven and Earth and bring me this fuckng Sayeed's family phone number.

    Dan: Okay, I'll go and talk to "The Wolf."