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Operation Mincemeat - (2021)
Okay - historical film time, and I'm pulled in two different directions. Learning about history is fun, but I also have to add that learning about history directly from films is a no-no because they manipulate the facts to make for a better story. The movie should be an inspiration to go seek out the real true story. Operation Mincemeat has that element of fun to it. But man - there's a flatness to historical films these days as well. Something a little mundane. Anyway, this is about the operation to float a corpse off the coast of Spain during World War II with papers on it that will fool the Nazis into thinking the Allies will invade Greece instead of Sicily. There's a lot of "eww" to that. They try to take a nice pic to include in his papers, but only end up with corpse face. Eww. He goes more and more rotten as the planning proceeds. Eww. We get to see some of the autopsy by the Spanish authorities, of this green, blown-up, rotten thing. Ewwww. So much corpse in this movie. Then there's Ian Fleming...
Ian Fleming (Johnny Flynn) was one of the planners of this operation, and the movie keeps making as much of that as it possibly can. For example, Charles Cholmondeley (Matthew Macfadyen) keeps saying "Everyone is a writer these days!" while Fleming is around, and at one point accosts him directly about how he's sick of everyone writing novels. Because we, the audience, are meant to go "Ha ha! Ian Fleming will write the James Bond novels!" Yes. We get it. And it goes on and on. Hints here, there and everywhere. Then, once the operation is underway, we see Ian Fleming at a typewriter and he's asked "What are you doing??" and he answers "I'm writing a spy novel!" We're meant to be thinking "Oh my God! He's been inspired to create James Bond!" Too overt movie. Too overt. And I thought just mentioning his name was a little too much.
This was okay - a decent movie about a devious deception that saved lives during World War II. I don't think it had an effect on the course of the whole war - not as much as the movie wants you to think it did - but it saved lives and it's interesting to see how it worked in detail.
6/10
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