After all, the biggest advantage of TV series over movies is that its duration can support a more complete and excellent story, and movies can't tell such a complete story in such a short and fast situation.
I don't want to compare these two "Zhou Dage", but the portrayal of this puppet Manchukuo middle-level official in TV series is so much better that you may even think: Is it because after the plot of the movie, Chief Zhou was promoted, went to the Puppet Manchukuo National University or the Japanese NCO School for postgraduate study, and then came out as Chief Zhou in TV series after graduation?
If you think that the main person in charge of the puppet Manchukuo Harbin, like Su Daqiang (actor: Dahongni), behaved so badly and stupidly in the film, even one of the few jokes in the film, then in the TV series, the intimidation brought by this section chief Gao Bin (actor: Cheng Yu) to the protagonist can be described as a very powerful villain.
This should be the enemy and villain that the middle-level underground party lurking in the puppet Manchukuo should face. In the setting of TV series, Gao Bin not only has a deep background, but also is a disciple of Kenji Toshihara (in real history, Kenji Toshihara was the head of the secret service in Harbin at that time, so the plot took place in Kurt, Harbin) and a friend of Shiro Ishii, the head of the 73 1 Army, so he can be said to be a traitor.
Ps: In addition to the 73 1 troops stationed in Harbin, the puppet Manchukuo actually had "Manchuria 100 troops" stationed in Mengjiatun area at the junction of Luyuan District and Chaoyang District in Changchun City. This unit studies anthrax and human and animal diseases. After hearing these two names, do you think that compared with 73 1 troops, this 1 troops. Because it was located in Changchun, the "capital" of Manchukuo at that time, all the information of this unit was systematically brought back to Japan and destroyed on the spot, so there is still not much evidence. Many historical materials are official documents and joint actions sent by this unit to other units (such as 73 1 unit) to confirm its existence.
The TV series was filmed on 20 12, and there are also problems of the times. What is certain now is that time will bring some problems to TV series, such as procrastination, too much help, backward shooting techniques and so on. However, it is precisely because TV plays spend a lot of time shooting delicate life scenes, so that the audience can better integrate into and get close to the mental journey of the main characters in the play.
When Zhou Yi, the protagonist of the ending TV series, was arrested and shot, Zhang Jiayi's performance was very touching because of the long preparation and plot development of the TV series, so the audience at that time had a very poor sense of the ending, and there were a lot of bad reviews, and even thought that the ending was a deliberate dog's tail. But I think this is an excellent ending of TV series, but the social and cultural environment at that time could not accept such an ending.
At the end of the TV series, an underground party that tried its best to deal with the puppet Manchukuo government and accomplished its task well was easily shot by two ordinary puppet Manchukuo gendarmes. He is dead, but his "boss"-Gao Bin, a high-level traitor of the puppet Manchukuo, is not dead; The Kuomintang officers lurking in the puppet Manchukuo did not die, but also cooperated with an operation as the protagonist of the underground party.
It is not surprising that 202 1 has such a plot, and 20 12 is not necessarily good. It is not surprising that 202 1 has such a plot, and 20 12 is not necessarily good. Incredibly, the original novelist Yong Xianquan did not agree with the final ending of the TV series. He felt very timid about the death of Zhou Yi, the protagonist, and publicly claimed that he was not satisfied with the ending, which also made it impossible to make a sequel. Instead, it turned this TV series into a TV series that cannot be remake.
This also makes the TV series "Cliff" really become a hit anti-war drama without garbage sequel series, which is very rare.
Therefore, my post-trial feeling is that the organization watching Above the Cliff is actually a qualified red movie, but it is not entirely a particularly good anti-Japanese spy war movie. "Wind" is the more suitable movie, and a full-cast "Blizzard Villa" will not get tired of watching it many times.