This is the scene when the boss resigned at the beginning. This pen is not in Le Carré's original work. The screenwriter added the picture of the boss using it to sign the "C" written under the pseudonym Contral. Then the problem comes, this is just What kind of pen? When I first saw this movie, I liked fountain pens very much. I found various materials, and asked many people. I finally got a vague answer. This is an osmia-duofold produced by Parker and a German fountain pen manufacturer before World War II. I searched all the pictures, and all the duofold pens have no "F" at the end of the pen, indicating the thickness of the nib. Until some time ago, a foreign netizen identified this pen as 223 (F) produced by osmia.
Wonderful, this part adapted by the screenwriter is really wonderful. The wonderful thing is that the manufacturer of this pen, osmia', is a German company with a long history and excellent products. I think it should be similar to Montblanc, Pelikan or something. are eponymous. Before World War II, in order to avoid high tariffs, Parker found osmia to jointly produce duofold, trying to expand product sales in the German-speaking region.
I can't find the picture of the duofold produced by Parker and osmia. The last picture of osmia 222, did you see the sign similar to Chinese copper coins, which is not found on Parker's duofold and the duofold produced by Parker and Denmark's olsen.
Why did the screenwriter let the boss use a German original pen? I think it is because of the boss's character. He is a very old-fashioned person. It was bought by the boss before the war or even when he went to work. Although the Parker duofold is good, it is an American product. Even if Parker sets up the factory in the UK, the boss will not use it, but using German products is not patriotic. what? From the perspective of the boss, osmia is a German pen factory established in 1919. Before the outbreak of World War II, osmia was not located in Nazi Germany. How can it be generalized that anyone using German products is unpatriotic? Besides, at the end of World War II, Germany was dismembered by the Allies, isn't West Germany also an ally?
Look at the date the boss signed, it's 1973. What has become of the world at this time, old enemies have become friends, old friends have become enemies, and the boss is still insisting on using the same view of right and wrong to measure people and things.
The method used by Bill Haydn and the Soviet Union was really ingenious. Haydn provided information first, so that the boss's actions were destroyed one by one, and the people in the rounder were caught and killed by the enemy one by one. Middle-level managers like Miley have doubts about the boss's ability to control. Let him perish first and make him crazy. The boss is desperate to doubt everyone. In his anger, he falls into the trap. The dispatch of Jim sparked an international dispute. Drinking hatred gives way, and dies in depression. The way the boss finds the mole is to check the files, what does each suspected object do first, when did he join the organization, how many times have he acted after joining the organization, who he has come into contact with each time he acts... He is like a historian home, trying to deduce new theories from the pile of old papers. In the end, he only narrowed his suspicions to the five of them, Smiley. Because he despised Allerion himself, he also sneered at the "witchcraft plan" he proposed, and as a result lost the chance to find evidence from this plan.
Smiley, starting from the witchcraft plan, took the timeline as the horizontal axis, and the events that happened at each point in time as the vertical axis. The dots gradually became clearer and finally connected, depicting the man behind Alleline. —Bill Hayden.
In fact, the fate of the boss is very similar to that of osmia. osmia' was later acquired by Faber-Castell, and has never paid attention to the production of fountain pens, so it quietly disappeared into the dust of history.
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