剑桥风云

Cambridge Spies,剑桥谍帮,剑桥间谍

主演:汤姆·霍兰德尔,托比·斯蒂芬斯,鲁伯特·彭利-琼斯,萨缪尔·韦斯特,斯图尔特·莱恩,Darrell D'Silva,安娜-露易丝·普拉曼,罗纳德·皮卡普,马塞尔·尤勒斯,Angus

类型:电视地区:英国语言:英语年份:2003

《剑桥风云》剧照

剑桥风云 剧照 NO.1剑桥风云 剧照 NO.2剑桥风云 剧照 NO.3剑桥风云 剧照 NO.4剑桥风云 剧照 NO.5剑桥风云 剧照 NO.6剑桥风云 剧照 NO.13剑桥风云 剧照 NO.14剑桥风云 剧照 NO.15剑桥风云 剧照 NO.16剑桥风云 剧照 NO.17剑桥风云 剧照 NO.18剑桥风云 剧照 NO.19剑桥风云 剧照 NO.20

《剑桥风云》剧情介绍

剑桥风云电视免费高清在线观看全集。
故事发生在1934年的英国,菲尔比(托比·斯蒂芬斯 Toby Stephens 饰)、博格思(汤姆·霍兰德 Tom Hollander 饰)和麦克林(鲁伯特·潘瑞-琼斯 Rupert Penry-Jones 饰)是三位在剑桥大学深造的前途无量的年轻人,他们受到了苏联海外情报部门的招募,成为了间谍,这就是之后闻名于历史的剑桥间谍帮。三个野心勃勃的年轻人将苏联视为实现他们政治理想抱负的肥沃土壤。 第二次世界大战爆发之后,间谍帮的成员们被英国政府雇佣,在整个战争期间,他们为苏联提供了无数的珍贵情报,可谓是于无形之中影响了整个战局。1951年,博格思和麦克林因为身份败露而逃往了苏联,剩下菲尔比一人顶着巨大的压力接受了来自英国政府的严酷调查。热播电视剧最新电影东北五仙开局一座山橘色奇迹我的小确幸尸控网络御宠娇妃男人们的大和亚莉克莎与凯蒂第三季一往无前心之所向昨日的果实梦魇疯人院乔治·华盛顿兄弟战争疯狂天才魔法少女伊莉雅:无名少女纸人回魂王牌部队制胜人生回到十六岁富二代花二哥与六朵金花神奇数字马戏团第一季急诊室的故事第九季心慌方·零中间人生枪火游戏抹布男孩强尼凯克我的杀手女友

《剑桥风云》长篇影评

 1 ) The permanent Cambridge spies' friendship notes

Through the first epidode we've experienced the beautiful life in Cambridge and the four roles' typical personalities.And we have to capture their mainly hearted theme through the dialogues of their daily life.They are living a life for finding a job outside the Cambridge world,what's that should be like?In this period of time,any conspiracies?

 2 ) 如果只能选一部英剧

多么令人震撼的一部英剧,无法用语言形容。

看了一次便不敢看第二次。

一次看毕便久久不能自拔,脑海中萦绕的只有一句话:人的一生有的时候真的是一个玩笑--虽然并不好笑。

我看的英剧不多,但如果非要排个座次,那么这部就是当仁不让的第一。

 3 ) 拍得倒是不错的

影片本身很棒,不过与史实或许有些差异。

我认为他们早年出于无知和冲动,投身间谍工作,但他们都是聪明人,在获得了大量政治情报之后,他们不难得出客观的结论。

但是已经骑虎难下了。

英国人对待历史的态度还是比较客观的,片子并没有把他们拍成十恶不赦的卖国贼,而是把他们描绘成一群忠于朋友的人。

聪明理性,充满感情。

很难想象我们能拍出这样的片子。

另外,字幕的翻译有些问题,还好大多能看懂。

 4 ) Goodbye, Old Life

关于剑桥的故事太多太多, 从此地走出的名人也载满史册。

一直没有想起去英国前看了一半的《剑桥风云》。

那时候迷迷糊糊地下了这四集片,满心期待,也算是为行程做准备吧。

十分钟之后发现是政治片,虽然情节吸引人,但还是到半即废,现在想想确实符合自己性格……直到有那么一个晴朗凉爽的日子,穿过国王学院,踏上旁边草地石刻《再别康桥》的某座不起眼的石桥,听人提起,这就是Guy Burgess, Philby那帮人当年"裸蹦"之桥,才金光回闪,顿有种神奇的穿越感…… Goodbye, Cambridge! Goodbye old life!红彤彤的理想,真正能实现的又有多少人?这部英剧间接告诉我们,因为历史和现实的残酷,答案是很少。

但是这不能磨灭埋没在历史洪流中这些勇士的贡献。

即便是剑桥五杰这样相对有名的人,我们也对其真正生活了解甚少,一些迷题争论也无从考究。

感谢这样一部严谨认真的剧,给我们或多或少展示了故事的一面……四个面相姣好的演员中,我最爱饰演Guy Burgess的Tom Hollander。

虽然媒体评论大多是类似于“他是由于身高原因不得不将戏路限制在搞笑这一特质之上”,我还得为此人叫冤,像Guy这种人物,虽然幽默讨喜,终究还是悲剧性结局……第二,除去舞台剧表演经验,对于伯吉斯的演绎也是Hollander的成名作之一吧?

说回剧本身,如果说Philby一行人牺牲之物都浮于水面,那么Burgess的牺牲和痛苦则是更深沉而抽象的。

他牺牲的也许就是自己又爱又恨的英格兰和宁静的后半生吧。

苏联浑浑噩噩,疾病缠身的结局让人慨叹命运的不公。

神秘放浪、口无遮拦、忠于同伴和深爱的人(他从来没忘记Julian),四人中感情最丰富,同时也最理智清醒的他没有像Philby那样得到实在的结果,船上对祖国的告别是他能得到的最后一点慰藉。

那一刻,真正是对年轻、对自己的根、对无所作为的告别。

我常想,如果将guy在苏联的后半生拍成一部富有浪漫主义色彩的悲剧,也未尝不可。

多少伟大的灵魂不是在郁郁寡欢中化为灰烬?

但是理想主义留下了不能磨灭的遗产,它成了一种氛围,几乎随处可见。

过了两天,又经此桥,看到一人站在桥上,面对剑桥一片夏日的绿色,满对清冽的River Cam,脱了上衣大喊一声:Goodbye, Cambridge! Goodbye Old Life! 随后一跃而进,旁人欢呼。

这也是当初四人跃下桥的回响吧。

 5 ) 苏联搞了那么多间谍有什么用,到头来还是解体了

苏联搞了那么多间谍有什么用,到头来还是解体了,俄罗斯什么实力不用我说了吧。

国家比拼还得是国家实力光明正大的比拼。

内心强大的人大多很宽容,国家也一样,留在英国的那位结局不就是个证明。

英国容忍了他存在。

幸好在苏联解体前都去世了,不然看着自己叛国为之热血奋斗过的理想最后轻轻一碰就到了,这种残酷真的是外人无法体会到。

至于那位早早去世的,想来才并不适合当间谍,他太理想主义了。

看到有人写他要求驻在伦敦的克格勃帮他买某家裁缝店的衣服,那人自己出了回忆录抱怨拿着他写的书单满伦敦逛书店买书,不禁一笑,这可真是贵族式生活。

可惜了.....早早酗酒去世那三位都很主流了,那位菲尔金恐怕最现实,早早放弃理想,成为职业间谍了吧,个人猜测。

 6 ) The True Memoirs of Anthony Blunt

“许多人可能会说,自杀可能是"光荣的"出路……但我认为,恰恰相反,那是一种懦弱的解决方式。

”-- Blunt回忆录在1930年代中期对于我和当时的很多人来说共产主义俄国是反对法西斯主义的唯一堡垒在那时西方国家对德国采取了暧昧的妥协的立场我被Guy说服为了反对法西斯主义我加入了他的苏联间谍组织这是一个出于良知的决定反对的是纳粹我选择了良心-- Blunt回忆录华丽丽的分割线---英语底子好的同学可以看这个The True Memoirs of Anthony Blunt Summary: A year after Guy's death, Anthony remembers his friend - and their folly - as best he can. Notes:Inspired by slowascent's Yuletide Letter and her love of the seven deadly sins, especially the sin of pride. Work Text:August 30th, 1964Guy went mad a bit, after Julian died. Perhaps I should have seen it then. It was the sort of madness that was too easy to dismiss, and it might have been that I wanted to dismiss it. We four friends had spent many years making excuses for one another, but I had known Guy the longest and excused the most. Friends since the beginning, I suppose I found it harder than most to admit he might be going so terribly wrong. He'd always had his excesses, little foibles and quirks. It is how things begin, isn't it? With Guy it was always matter of degrees, each action seems less harsh in the light of what came before. I wanted to believe that he wasn't off the rails, that it was simply more of his usual. More fool myself, and that is something not easily admitted.He'd always been a bit madcap, hadn't he? We were so different, he and I, for all that our lives and upbringings had been so similar. It was likely what drew us together, at least it was why I noticed him at Cambridge. When you moved in the same circles as Guy, it was hard not to notice him. Loud and flamboyant, the sort to speak his mind - no, not speak it, for the word speak implies some sort of decorum. Guy shouted it from rooftops and pulpits. Discretion was not his friend. Whereas things in my life were so careful and controlled, compartmentalised, Jackie said the same thing to me so many years later. That I had boxes and found it all too easy to simply shut something away. Shouldn't I have? My compartmentalisation kept us safe, so many times. When Guy went off on his tangents - even when we were both Apostles - I was the one that stood sure and true. I was the one that remained calm when so many simply reacted and acted. The mark of an English gentleman, that deep-rooted stoicism, wasn't it? I epitomised that very thing and always had. I couldn't be any other way. Even when Guy told others he was a friend of Stalin whilst drunk at parties, I would be the one smiling benignly at Guy's little joke. I was always able to pretend it was a joke, but guy never was. He always felt things so strongly. He threw himself into all of it, holding nothing of himself back. I warned him of the danger of it, but Guy was never the sort to listen to such advice.Julian was the first warning, or he should have been. He'd almost gone to him, after that party we were at. Raining. It was already raining Julian had said, the crowd having gone quiet in that convenient way that it did. Inconvenient, actually, where Julian was concerned. That night Guy had been drunker than most nights. An accomplishment when one thinks about it seriously. He'd been so determined to leave the house, to find Julian. To explain to him privately that we hadn't changed. That we were working for Moscow and our rejection of socialism was part of the cover. I stopped him. I was the one that wouldn't let him go. Perhaps I was the one that made it so hard for Guy when Julian died. Had I let him go that night... There's little time for regret in our lives, if any. I refuse to doubt my decisions then. At the time they were the right ones. Guy couldn't have let Julian know any more than we could have let anyone know. It was the point of it, wasn't it? Distancing ourselves from the movement in order to have more use.It wasn't a friendship without troubles, even when we were at Cambridge. Guy was brilliant, and if I were utterly and brutally honest, I'd say he was smarter than I was. Yet he squandered it shamefully throwing away a brilliance in a way that always bothered me. There was so much he could have done. There was no doubt he'd have been that much more valuable an asset had he not drank and caroused so. It wasn't like anyone could have altered that. When we were still in school it was the norm, just a bit of boys being boys. Once we had graduated, well, there was never any stopping Guy, nor changing Guy.I realise now I couldn't have. I never thought it at the time, I thought I had him under control. Yes, he said things no one should, especially one in our position. Guy would get drunk and say the most obscene things. Few ever paid them any mind. He was known as a bit of a drinker and if he declared himself a spy at a party, who would think his words the truth? Should I have noticed it then? I told myself there was nothing to notice. Guy would be Guy, I excused it over and over, always taking note but doing little. I would say a word here and there, nothing more than suggestions or mild admonishments. They were laughed off. Why wouldn't they be laughed off? I never could have seriously admonished Guy and somehow he knew that.. Too many things we laughed off and brushed away. Pride is such a funny thing, isn't it? Not that I would have called my perceived control of Guy pride, I still have issues with referring to it as such. It seemed so reasonable then. We were friends, friends before anything else, before everything else. Shouldn't a man be capable of keeping an eye on his friends, be capable of keeping them in line? A better friend might have seen that it wasn't the simple thing I told myself it was/ Frankly, Guy was out of control long before I cared to admit it.So many at school knew what we were, even if I'd never been as open as he was. I refer to the communism, that is, not the homosexuality -- though I am sure many knew that as well, such an ill-kept secret as it was in those days. There was no shame in being a communist, not as a student. Being an anti-fascist was a point of pride for many, and later in life it was seen as a sort of undergraduate rash. It was an ailment that one had the good sense to recover from. We were Apostles the, an informal fellowship of students who gathered for many reasons. Many of us homosexuals, all of us anti-fascists, that sort of movement was nearly expected when we were students. Just as it was expected we would move on from it after college to join the establishment. Only, we never did recover from it, we only seemed to. It was all part of the master plan. One couldn't be an effective spy if one was known to have socialist tendencies. It was logical, sensible, the most useful thing that we could have done: distance ourselves from our own pasts. But it hurt Guy deeply, having to pretend that he'd rejected Communism, especially to Julian.I would swear it all changed when Julian died. I'd rather not use the word died, it sounds so innocuous, as if he were elderly and passed on in his sleep. Julian was killed, yet another death at the hands of those same fascists we all hated. There were times that it seemed Julian had the simpler and easier task. There was elegance in our roles – an excitement - that didn't exist in Julian's open devotion to the cause. I told myself that. We all did, I'm sure, that we were fighting the longer fight, the more important one. What would have changed for us if we could have done what he did? If we could have been open in our fight against the forces that tried to devour Europe?He knew, you know. He knew that Julian and I had been together. I knew of his affection for Julian but it didn't stop me. Guy never saw how they would have been the end of each other, fanned flames burning too quickly. Their passion, however different and sometimes misguided, would have been the end of them both. That isn't to say there was anything noble about my affair with Julian. I was fond of him, yes, but never in love. Love was such a dangerous thing. As dangerous as happiness, moreso when they came together. The four of us - any spies really - couldn't afford such luxuries, not and perform our chosen task and be safe.I should have seen it. I should have seen it after Julian's death but I wouldn't allow myself to. Pride, hubris, call it what you will. Perhaps even something so much simpler: the loyalty of four friends to one another. Beyond any cause or any devotion, those friends were the things that I had to keep safe and that I held to be most important. Do you know I believed it? I believed that I, Anthony Blunt, could keep us safe. I thought that I could protect each of us against the world. What an utter fool I was. There was nothing and no one that could protect us from ourselves, we were always our own worst enemies. Guy and Donald were both problems, but it was Guy that mattered most to me. Kim and Donald; Guy and myself. It was how things had always been and how they would always be.I never knew if he was hurt by Jackie's defection, as it might have been called. Jackie wasn't as important to Guy as Julian had been. I always felt that he was more a distraction to Guy, something to keep him occupied when he couldn't be bothered venturing out to one of his less than reputable locales. Perhaps that alone should have warned me away. Once his distraction was gone - once his distraction was mine - he became ever the more on edge. I've said already how brilliant he was. Brilliant and mad -- no, lost is a better word then mad. Guy needed our cause, he needed to believe. Julian, to him, had been an ideal, the personification of a concept and a belief. Not only someone he loved, but his beacon in an otherwise dark world. What Guy felt he should be and how he should be. When Julian was killed it all changed. He clung to the cause, wrapping himself in it as one would a blanket on the coldest of nights.I should have seen. I should have seen and I should have stopped it, long before I became so tired. There is a part of me that believes, still, this end could have been avoided. If I had acted earlier or made more of an effort that we could have all been safe. Guy deserved more than a warm coat and a sad life lived out away from the country he loved so. I never wrote him once he'd been exiled. The letters might have been intercepted after all. I couldn't have, and maintained my own secrets. Sad that those secrets that in the end were made public. In the end, we were all betrayed. When we became agents at Cambridge, we were such idealists, and we believed. It was exciting. Did I ever say that? There was this whiff of adventure that came with being a spy. It was a life that I could never have imagined otherwise. A life I could never have had otherwise. When did it stop being such an adventure? When did watching over my friends become such a task and a trial? The years took their toll. I would say that it was inevitable, but I am not fond of admitting inevitability. I'm not fond of admitting my own faults, nor am I fond of admitting my own part in our downfall. Yet fond or not, it is there. My hubris led us as much to our downfall as their excess did.Silly, isn't it? To think that we shared secrets that changed the world, and yet it was the simplest things that affected us. Julian's death. Jackie. Stalin making a pact with Hitler in order to buy himself time. The last... Were it not for Kim and myself, I think we would have lost Guy then. He would have self-destructed or done something truly foolish. He was always on the edge, you realise. When I heard of what he did in Washington, driving drunk, appearing at that dinner at Kim's house, I knew just how far Guy had gone. That he'd lost his belief in some way, and had gone over the edge, seeking his own downfall. Only his self-destruction would pull in those associated with him. It would pull in Donald, Kim and myself. Or it may have been that he was already gone long before Washington and that even to this day I'm fooling myself. I'm letting that same pride colour my memories. It's a difficult thing see things clearly that are in the past. Our visions are filtered to show the events in the light they find most favourable. In some ways our memories are like paintings. They are creations of our own mind that relates to the world but does not truly reflect it. We see that world in the painting through the filter of the artist with our own perceptions layered atop that. A difficult thing to consider when it's something as personal as our own own past. Am I remembering correctly, interpreting the events the way they occurred? Or have my perceptions shaped my very memories? Do I remember things the way I wish them to be? I can no longer tell.

 7 ) Bloody Brilliant

BBC的剧通常有一种质量保证,尤其是对文艺型的片。

于是乎BBC很自然地把Cambridge Spies拍得文艺腔十足,不去评价好坏,至少是种风格。

本来是冲着Toby Stephens去的,结果看到BBC美男一箩筐……进而对Tom Hollander的演技大赞,对Samuel West也不能自已了。

感叹一句,这到底是个男色经济时代。

讲正题。

先声明,我对G片没有特别倾向,给剑桥风云五星绝对讲得出道理。

人和人之间的情感绝对讲级别。

你跟隔壁班级某同学的情感如果设定为0,跟自己班的可能是1,跟前后桌的是2,跟同桌的是3,跟好朋友的可能是4,跟爹妈是5,跟那个老给你不及格的老师可能是-100(只是个比方)……随后,你跟爱人的级别多少?

跟同志的级别多少?

跟挚友的级别多少?

跟“主义”的级别又是多少?

他们说,“友情高于一切”。

什么是“一切”?

Kim说老婆是他的“一切”,于是友情就高过了“一切”。

“如果要我选择背叛国家或背叛朋友,我希望自己有勇气去背叛国家”——不是所有朋友都能值得Guy说这句话,唯有那种同理想共生死的兄弟才够得上。

光凭这一点,这片子就够感人。

BBC不仅善于改编剧本,还善于挑演员。

在我看来,主演四人中有三个都在超常发挥。

列举几个我脑袋里“喀”不掉的镜头:Toby Stephens:对着他的共产党老婆说“我不爱你”,那眼神真作孽;在和Anthony一起看到斯大林与希特勒结盟的新闻后,那个失落和惶恐的神情;知道Anthony想要退出时,满脸的愤怒和失望……他的戏多而不滥。

Samuel West:被兽医召唤那次,怕死型“抖霍”,却还本能地数落一下墙上的画,然后继续“抖霍”;两次与女王的交谈都很风趣,表情是紧张与暗喜交织;对Donald把秘密透给老婆一事发飙,面无表情地爆发摔杯子,把Donald吓得半死……他有很多种不同的严肃表情。

Tom Hollander:在Julian走过时完全被吸引的眼神,魂都游出来了;知道Julian死讯后欲哭无泪、“奥闷痛”到极致;去买领带时一副“知识分子里的流氓”腔调;去莫斯科前跟Anthony借书那一幕我十年八年都忘不掉……我学的就是他骂人的痞样。

看到他们在Dining Hall里吃饭的情景,让我想起自己披着gown在high table上跟先生们共同进餐的情景,还有不远处那个叫Trinity的college。

原来是那样复古。

我个人万分喜爱他们在剑桥毕业那段。

Good bye the old days——带着愤怒、志气、理想和友爱,他们出卖国家,却不出卖灵魂。

 8 ) 乱谈

首先抒发一下形而下的东西:这片子最吸引我的就是tom hollander,他演的Guy Burgess 是至今为止看到过最喜欢的一个...他在戏里...实在是迷人到我见犹怜,若我是男人,定要去跟他搞基(啊这是怎样一种可怕的择偶观)然后是形而上的东西:其实我对所谓的贵族精神、兄弟会、布鲁姆斯伯里文化圈就像对外星球上的元素周期表一样缺乏了解的兴趣,那其实是一个和我们完全无关的世界不是么。

剑桥太美,若是我,这种从一个庭院到另一个庭院再到另一个庭院的生活真真不错,我情愿在那里读一辈子书不出来。

只是我真羡慕这种人生,不用工作也可以生存,可以做自己最喜欢的事,而且一旦做了,就要做到最好,活着可以没有安全感,但是一定要有信念...啊这是怎样单纯又浓郁的人生。

当然我这样的格局,很难理解剑桥出来的人怎么会为了人类大同的理想选择做叛国者,帮助苏维埃背叛英格兰...大概只有太祖那句最高指示可以解释:知识越多越反动。

当然像我们这样生活在一个拥有最先进生产力的天朝的兵蚁,生活的原则往往残忍而简单,那就是“搵食不易,事事小心”。

你没有选择的权利,你只有不选择的权利。

 9 ) Two Quotes from Shakespeare

第一集Burgess从剑桥毕业时站在桥上的speech:"I love this country, this scepter'd fucking isle, this wonderful, foolish England."摘自Richard II 第二幕第一场John of Gaunt:This royal throne of kings, this scepter'd isle,This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,This other Eden, demi-paradise,This fortress built by Nature for herselfAgainst infection and the hand of war,This happy breed of men, this little world,This precious stone set in the silver sea,Which serves it in the office of a wall,Or as a moat defensive to a house,Against the envy of less happier lands,This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.[最著名的赞美英格兰的文学段落之一]第四集Philby背诵的段落:(摘自Henry V Act IV Prologue. 阿金库尔战役前夜)The poor condemnèd English,Like sacrifices, by their watchful firesSit patiently and inly ruminateThe morning’s danger; and their gesture sad,Investing lank-lean cheeks and war-worn coats,Presenteth them unto the gazing moonSo many horrid ghosts.莎士比亚的历史剧四部曲——理查二世,亨利四世上下(两部),亨利五世。

第一集和第四集分别摘录了第一部和第四部的段落,奇妙地呼应起来了。

印象深刻的片段:Philby在公园长椅上对着Litzi Friedman的背影一遍遍重复“I don't love you.” 与其是拒绝,不如说是自我说服。

(Philby可以为了信仰放弃家庭,但是Maclean却很难过这个坎儿。

四个人的特点非常鲜明,而且很大程度上是对立的。

Philby老辣沉稳,Maclean则受情感控制,Blunt行事谨慎,悄然抽身,Burgess则放浪形骸,被命运推到了莫斯科。

)Blunt提出要帮Burgess买一件大衣,暗示他去的地方将会很冷。

用一段亨利五世在阿金库尔战役前夕发表的讲话来概括这四个人的friendship(comradeship):St Crispin's Day SpeechHe that shall live this day, and see old age,Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,And say "To-morrow is Saint Crispian."Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars,And say "These wounds I had on Crispin's day."And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,From this day to the ending of the world,But we in it shall be remembered-We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;For he to-day that sheds his blood with meShall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,This day shall gentle his condition;And gentlemen in England now a-bedShall think themselves accurs'd they were not here,And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaksThat fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.P.S. Philby的美国学徒是Endeavour试播集里面的Special Branch Agent,长了一张特工脸==

 10 ) 震撼的影片

刚看完剑桥间谍,插曲很好听。

不知为什么哭了,觉得他们好不容易,剑桥五杰,不过,我还是不知道第五个人是谁。

他们为了信仰,为了友情工作着,不曾出卖朋友,他们虽然帮苏联,但他们没有出卖英国的情报。

在那样的年代,真不容易。

很震撼,很震撼。

《剑桥风云》短评

实在是看不下去!大失所望~

3分钟前
  • modernoriginal
  • 较差

年轻人对时代对世界的彷徨。。EP1剧情太跳脱了,不知道在赶什么进度似的赶得节奏处理得莫名其妙。EP2洗脱了身份,可依旧沉不住气的幼稚。反法西斯的激情。青年人想从方盒的笼中、鄙视的陈腐中挣脱获得自由,其实只是一个笼到另一个。S4已补,还是让人唏嘘的...

7分钟前
  • Christelle
  • 还行

没想到是在这里再次遇见 Eton+Trinity College。注定将成为社会最高层的年轻人却依旧为认定的信念和信仰选择付出一生。虽然还远不过瘾,但至少有这部戏能让人好好感受下 Samuel West 和 TomHollander 的才华,西叔军装敬礼的那幕帅的啊。

9分钟前
  • 脱氧核糖十三
  • 推荐

英伦气质很迷人!

14分钟前
  • 乐天
  • 力荐

所谓的革命

19分钟前
  • CH405
  • 还行

再也回不去的England 同窗情谊 真实事件改变 总觉得看过 看了不到1集想起来 之前就没看下去

23分钟前
  • 江湖片子
  • 还行

最后一集很悲戚,剑桥成了象征,从推翻剑桥的privilege开始,到叛逃苏联结束。讽刺的是,他们因privilege躲过了许多危机。信仰和家?真想在白天看看英格兰。guy的结局真是颓废孤独,philby好像总是赢家,Anthony真是有气质,Donald有点愣头青。安格尔顿在这里是个莽撞的CIA小伙。

26分钟前
  • Sandi
  • 还行

Epic! 各種迷死人。 載了很久, 不知為毛拖到現在才看, Burgess 和 Blunt最打動我。。。。也許潛意識覺得betray England去為Stalin 服務很不可思議,因為Stalin並沒比Hitler 好多少,不過現在能理解為什麼他們要當Communists了。。。

31分钟前
  • sarah🇺🇦
  • 力荐

...谍报情节也太儿戏草率了吧= =接头和刺杀认真的么.....而且动不动就脱了啥鬼..想看谍战环节简直毫不过瘾....

35分钟前
  • Gzerox
  • 还行

很严肃地给了5星,虽然理想得有些偏离现实,但是英国的共产主义者远比苏联的更纯粹。这版里最出彩的必然是伯吉斯,麦克莱恩的演员太漂亮了,菲尔比稍有点弱,和他五人组老大的身份不符,布伦特的作用似乎也被淡化了,最遗憾的是直接砍掉了坎坷罗斯。最后说一句,英格玛是波兰人破译的。

36分钟前
  • The 星星
  • 力荐

非常动人的一段历史。前两集有点平淡,后两集非常精彩。结尾和Maurice虐人的结尾一样一样的,都是回忆当年再也回不去的剑桥岁月。

41分钟前
  • 冬叶
  • 力荐

神马英伦啊剑桥啊English gentlemen啊友谊啊基友啊信仰啊背叛啊,多多的闷骚多多的神经多多的萌啊!

43分钟前
  • koukou
  • 推荐

还行吧

45分钟前
  • 无无无无无
  • 还行

一部看的我无比纠结的片子, 一方面由于主角情结主观上同情the cambridge four, 另一方面毕竟他们作为双面间谍出卖了国家而理智上下意识的反感。。。

47分钟前
  • chains
  • 力荐

西叔帅啊!!!再怨念一把NT的Ivanov换了人。。。

52分钟前
  • aicbgyihai
  • 力荐

各种搞基,挺无聊的

54分钟前
  • 哆啦没梦
  • 较差

1集弃

57分钟前
  • 逢考必过
  • 还行

家国之间,友谊至上。他们风风雨雨的来,轰轰烈烈的离开,他们没能改变历史,正如没能改变自己。

60分钟前
  • ChrisKirk
  • 力荐

本身是很吸引人的故事啊 无奈看的昏昏欲睡 弃

1小时前
  • zhangyl
  • 较差

情节架构不如某小说,但是大叔正太们一个个都太美了啊!!!><

1小时前
  • 周十万
  • 推荐