The criminal underworld believes in equal opportunity. If anyone wants to participate in organized criminal activity, the door is open.
In the case of The Berlin File, the door that opened is now closed because of secrecy needed to conduct an illegal arms exchange taking place between a North Korean, a Russian, and an Arab, in a hotel room in Berlin, Germany.
Before the transaction can be completed, agents from the Mossad (Israeli intelligence) burst into the room. They tell the North Korean he can leave; they only want the Arab and the Russian guys.
The North Korean spy tries to leave the scene but a South Korean NIS agent chases after him. He manages to escape but the NIS agent still plans to pursue him. South Korea needs to find a bank account that belonged to the late Korean leader Kim Jung-il. The funds will be used by other countries that aid North Korea. NIS believes the North Korean spy has information about the money.
Unfortunately, the spy is being betrayed by his own countrymen. They also want to gain access to Kim Jung-il's bank account for their own political agenda and plan to frame him as a traitor. He needs to try to escape from his North Korean comrades. the South Korean NIS, and the other international spy agencies like the Israeli Mossad and the American CIA who are thrown into the “mix”.
He wants to escape with the woman he loves.
Can he escape? Where will he go?
Main Characters:
North Korean spy Pyo Jong-Sung (played by Ha Jung-Woo, “Narco Saints”)
South Korean NIS agent Jung Jin-Soo (played by Han Suk-Kyu, “Tree With Deep Roots”).
"The Berlin File" (2013) - #Kdrama #Koreanmovies #Action #Spy #Thriller #moviegems
— Treathyl Fox (aka cmoneyspinner) ~ #Freelancer (@cmoneyspinner) April 30, 2024
Exposed during an illegal arms trade gone wrong in Berlin, a North Korean agent tries to flee! But a South Korean agent is on his trail.https://t.co/4zvRO6hfUe via @amazon @goshoppingbees pic.twitter.com/IYOexV1Zo3
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