The Courier | Cold War Era

Emmalee 2022-03-11 08:01:41

Doctor Strange is heartbroken for humanity.

When there is no superpower, even an ordinary businessman always regards the cause of saving mankind as his responsibility.

This kind of feeling is very interesting, foreigners' movies are mostly for the family, and save the world by the way. But this time is different. In order to save the world, Doctor Strange put his family at risk, and he has a taste of generosity.

Moreover, this basically untrained "spy" actually survived the torture of Lao Maozi, and there seems to be no other reason other than using the will of human beings to explain it.

But even stranger is this one.

In Lao Maozi's country, this man is also considered to be a powerful vested interest, and he doesn't know what is wrong. He insists on getting along with himself, and like Doctor Strange, he has tied up his family.

However, the risk of Doctor Strange getting on his own family is not as high as this one, and even has some wonderful "side effects".

And this one has completely put his family in.

It's not insane, ordinary people can't do this kind of thing.

However, there are some people who do these things for no reason. Why is this?

Seems like a very worthwhile question.

However, just like "Swan Lake", you can express her beauty, you can express her pathos, but you cannot convey other things.

This kind of "dangerous" thinking is quite dangerous.

The whole story picture is very dark, I don't know if I want to fit the situation at that time.

This war without gunpowder seems equally thrilling.

Because what we see is a group of idealists who have no way out, and it is completely unknown when their will will collapse.

View more about The Courier reviews

Extended Reading
  • Darron 2022-03-27 09:01:21

    If he hadn't agreed to go to the Soviet Union, he might have been a contented, happy salesman every day.

  • Lottie 2022-03-26 09:01:14

    Don't be funny, the traitor should die.

The Courier quotes

  • Oleg Penkovsky: Now the most important question, if you want to do business in Moscow, I need to know.

    Greville Wynne: Yes?

    Oleg Penkovsky: Can you hold your alcohol?

    Greville Wynne: [leans forward] It's my one true gift.

    [they both laugh and finish their spirits in one gulp]

  • Title Card: By 1960, the nuclear arms race had intensified. The United States and Soviet Union now possessed weapons capable of wiping out humanity.

    Title Card: As Khrushchev and his American counterparts traded threats, many feared that the world was on the verge of imminent destruction.