This film is based on real events. The real events on the screen are very shocking to me, because I will think from time to time that this is what really happened in this world when I watched it. Sophie Marceau naturally takes the lead as the French female ambassador. Although all kinds of righteousness in the film are close to the performance of the revolutionary machine, her acting skills that have been helpless for decades in the film industry seem to have not improved much. Nevertheless, because she played a real character, the real deeds of Louise, the heroine of the French resistance movement, especially the details of this glorious woman who died at the age of 98 in 2004, moved me again—this is what really happened. Past, admirable legend.
Compared with Sister Sophie, several characters around her acted more touchingly than her. They are all weak women and have their own misfortunes. They were actually used by the Allied forces to be tricked into carrying out secret missions in occupied France, and they ended up unfortunately. I don't know how many tragic stories of such painful fate are behind so many magnificent battles in human history. I don't know what kind of mood they are in the real history, whether they are voluntary or forced, they can be elated.
Having said that, the technique and technology of this movie are really average. The atmosphere creation, the control of the scene, the performance of some of the protagonists, and some logical problems are all inferior to the familiar Hollywood. Probably the French are used to making slutty literary films. But at the end, the moment the Nazis announced their surrender, no matter how banal and mediocre the handling, my eyes were hot. I am not so easily moved by love, but so easily moved by history. Pay tribute to them.
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