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Now that the city has a skating rink, do you plan to use it? |

There seems to be a common trend among spy thrillers.
The main character is first introduced as the best spy there is. Then, the villain is portrayed as an evil mastermind bent on destroying the Western world. We then follow the spy as he attempts to bring down the mastermind terrorist. Along his action-packed adventure, he befriends people that at first seem trustworthy, but are all hiding something.
Eventually the spy falls in love with girl, terrorist captures girl, spy goes to rescue girl and defeats terrorist to save the world. Throw in a few surprises and you have the basic body structure for any spy movie.
Ridley Scott’s “Body of Lies” doesn’t stray too far from this cookie-cutter scenario. Based on David Ignatius’s 2007 novel, “Body of Lies” follows the story of CIA anti-terror agent Roger Ferris (Leonardo DiCaprio). Ferris attempts to bring down a rising sophisticated terrorist in Amman, Jordan. As he works with the head of Jordanian intelligence, Hani Salaam (Mark Strong), he quickly learns that trust and honesty come first in this relationship, something Ferris’s boss, Ed Hoffman (Russell Crowe), hasn’t learned.
Hoffman, who lives comfortably in the United States, battles Ferris for control of the operation while lack of communication and misdirection complicates the already highly intricate spy world.
The plot is well put together with a few surprising twists, but doesn’t allow the insecure feeling of who to trust.

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Now that the city has a skating rink, do you plan to use it? |