yYou know what they say. If you can't stand the heat, smuggle drugs from your Sahara racket. Alas, these are the wise words of young cartel driver Max (Alfie Allen, bringing the reckless high energy required for characters and adventures). We first met him, traveling through the Algerian part of the North African desert, heading to Beirut with a companion named Carlos (Nezar Thalal) and swapping a lot of cocaine for some antique statues, at that time Bish, Bash, bash, wallop, what happened? An ambush from an armed militant group killed Carlos, about to kill Max? But then, one of the groups started, killed all the stones and died, then waved Max and Coke in the car and carried it out there? That yes what happened! Oh my goodness, welcome to the first 37 seconds of the Atom, a five-part miniseries that you shouldn't expect to relax anytime soon.
Max's rescuers were reluctant to provide his real name, so Max called him the abbreviation of JJ – “Jihadi John”. If this offends anyone's subtle sensitivity, I think you should leave 37 seconds ago. JJ relocated them to Benghazi for unspecified reasons. Max could hope to return to his original plan.
An unusually armed physics professor…Samira Wiley of the atomic mass. Photo: Sifdine Elamine/Sky/Pulse Films
Meanwhile, we ran to other parts of the world, including Russia’s Caucasus Mountains, where the terrible daughter of the oligarch, Oksana Shirokova (Avital Lvova) is sending boxes to Beirut through some overwhelmed herders. She added that they and unspecified content (“to your statue”) were secretly smuggled from the nuclear state and must always be kept two meters. Ule looked even more reluctant. The savvy audience repointed the title of the series and nodded.
For episode one or two, you'll worry about it being too much. Among multiple locations and destinations, a cartel and villain was added in Marrakech, JJ, who flashed back to Syria, is an American university in Beirut, Samira Wiley is the murdered militant of Cassie Elliott, a lost little boy (Keni Emmanuelle, the speechless part is heartbreaking), CIA and Max’s beloved girlfriends Laetitia (Charlie Murphy) and the boss of Brian Gleeson and Dr. Elliott, Mark, among others.
“Violence happens often”…Shazad Latif plays JJ. Photo: Sifdine Elamine/Sky/Pulse Films
Fortunately, as you start to feel, if you are given another piece of information, it will drive the whole mass out of the head, the flooding of new things stops, and the plot starts to get deeper and deeper.
JJ's mysterious backstory is filled, and his motives are complex at any time. Max's drama ter gradually gives way as the two realize they don't have ordinary cartel deals, no ordinary cargo. Suspense never relaxes because they are numerous territories of various vehicles that are all over the world, sometimes put on multiple weapons, sometimes by people who just want to murder them, sometimes by people who just want to murder them and increasingly dirty dicks and fanatic things, I don't know that my moves are hard. go.
Violence is frequent, but especially for all who are still recovering from the difficult, narrow roads until the narrow sight of the north – a kind cartoonish. The questions it asks are about what it means to live a good life, how people are perverted religion, seeking redemption or revenge, and adding unexpected weight to the whole, although it can still be used as a destructive, Guy-Ritchie-style drug cream paper-cumpaper-cum-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-buddy-movie, if needed.
But what the atomic can bring is that watching someone spends only one or two extra passes, giving the audience a little better experience than you expected, just a little better than you need.
Atomic Play airs on Sky Max and now in the UK and Australia