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Diplomatic Storm

Diplomatic Storm

Comedy

Bertrand Tavernier

Thierry Lhermitte, Raphael Personnaz, Niels Arestrup, Bruno Raffaelli, Julie Gayet, Anaïs Demoustier, Thomas Chabrol, Thierry Frémont, Alix Poisson, Marie Bunel, Jean-Marc Roulot, Sonia Roland, Didier Bezace, Jane Birkin, Renaud Calvet, François Bégaudeau, Joséphine de la Baume, Jean-Paul Rouve, Bertrand Tavernier

2013

France

Film review analysis↗

Completed

French

113 minutes

2025-03-02 15:38:34

Detailed introduction

This film (drama)Also known asQuai d'Orsay,is aFranceProducerwomen sex,At2013Released in year 。The dialogue language isFrench,Current Douban rating6.8(For reference only)。
Alexandre Dayaud de Worms is a tall, handsome man, very popular among women and full of charm, who also happens to be the foreign minister of the Enlightenment nation - France. He has thick silver hair, an athlete's physique, and a slightly tanned complexion; his figure is everywhere, from the podium of the United Nations in New York to the imminent war zone in Ubangi, Central Africa. In these places, he questions those in power and implores the greats to bring peace, calming the nerves of belligerents, all of which proves the halo of the Nobel Peace Prize above his head. Alexandre Dayaud de Worms possesses a powerful and always battle-ready mind, adhering to the Trinity principles of diplomatic means: legality, wisdom, and efficiency. He navigates through the neoconservatives of America, the corrupt Russians, and the greedy Chinese. Although the world does not match the greatness of the French spirit, the artistic spirit of France feels tightly sealed within its own borders. Young graduate of the French National School of Administration, Arthur Flament, is hired by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to handle the foreign minister's "speeches." That is to say, he must write speeches for the foreign minister! However, he also needs to learn to write carefully and manage relations with the minister's surrounding staff, finding his own place among the office director and various consultants revolving around the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where pressure, ambition, and dirty tricks are all too common... Here he catches a glimpse of the world's fate, yet he is also threatened by the bureaucratic inertia of senior expert officials. [by. Hujiang French] Quai d'Orsay used the translation from Time Network, meaning "Orsay Station," which is actually a street name along the Seine River in Paris, literally translated to "Orsay Riverbank." The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs is located on this street, hence it often refers to the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

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