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1. TIME 2017年7月31日号

L EG E N D ! 8 WI M B L E D 〇 N V ー C 丁〇 R ー E S. 19 GRAND SLAM@TITLES. watch iS a witness tO a player whO stands alone as the greatest in the history Of mens tennis. Worn by a legend who continues his incredible journey, rewriting the records, again and again, with his signature precision and grace. ROIex congratulates the incomparable Roger Federer on his historic 8th WimbIedon victory and 19th Grand Slam@ title. lt doesn't just tell time. lt tells history. ROLEX

2. TIME 2017年7月31日号

TIME VOL. 190 , NO. 5 ー 2017 3 ー Conversation 引 For the Record News from the し S. and around the world 5 lWhat comes after the Senate's failed effort to repeal Obama's health care law 引 Facts vs. alternative facts ユ例 MeralAksener, Turkey's IronLady ユ 2 ー Pamplona's annual bull run 1 引 Wildfires scorch southern Europe 16 llan Bremmer on the Arab world's sole working democracy What tO watch, read, see and dO 4 引 GirIs Trip is worth a trip tO the movie theater 4 引 The best Spider-Man movies, ranked 4 引 TheLast ' 1 ン C00 れ” Amazon S spin 0 Ⅱ F. Scott Fitzgerald's unfinished novel 501 Ryan Gattis' thriller Safe, and a historyofsixfamous womenbased on whatthey ate 52 ー 8 Questions for formerVice PresidentAl Gore The Brief 3 蘚ド " The View ldeas, opinion, innovations 1 引 Tears and the athlete's psyche ユ釧 The real origins Of summer vacation 20 ー Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer mlnes government statistics for hidden truths 2 幻 David Von Drehle on "the Angel of Death Row ” Members 可 UlsterRifles wait tO evacuate Dunkirk - 斤 01 れ 0 れ improvised pier oflorries 砒 low tide 0 〃 e 1 , 1940 Ph0tograph 妙 March ofTime/ The LIFEPicture Collection/ Getty lmages; CO ー orizatio れ by Sa れれ Dullaway forTIME The Features Malls of America ロ The D 題れⅳ The Secret One-quarter ofall Spirit History U. S. mallsmayclose The U. S. readied federal The summer's biggest over the next five years agencies and even movie take s place during as our shared spaces WorldWar ll's darkest the military against continue tO move online Russia's efforts tO turnBy Stephanie ByJosh Sanburn 30 undermine the 2016 Zacharek 36 presidential election Q&Awith director ByMassimo Christopher N01an ONTHE COVER: Ph0tograph courtesy Calabresi 22 ByElizaBerman41 ofWarnerBros. TIME Asia is published 可 TIME Asia (Hong Kong) 凵 m . TIME publishes eight double issues. Each counts as 20 of 52 issues in an annual subscriptlon. TIME may so publish 引 extra issues. ◎ 2017 Time Asia (Hong Kong) l_imlted. rights reserved. ReprOductlon inwhole orin partwithoutwritten BHmission is prohibited. TIME and the Red Border are protectedthroughtrademark regtstration inthe U. S. and inthe countrieswhere TIME magazinecirculates. Bureau of Circulations. s : げ the (x)stalserviæs a に代 us that your magazine is undeliverable,we have no further obllgatlon unless ℃ receive a address Wlthin two a 「 s. CUSTOMER SERVICE AND 24 / 7 紀 e , 聞ー n 期・代一 ~ 5 曲 , ~ 、 t わ / / 物 w. れ e ー加 . c / 、 . rp ・ You m a 0 email ourCustomer Services Center at 日期ⅵ′魅än冶asla.com 併 call ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , orwntetoTmeAs 旧 (Hong Kong) Limited, 3 〃 F, 0 0 「 d House,Taikoo 曰 aæ , 979 Klng's Road,Quarry Bay, Hong Kong.ln 」 a n , thesea 「 ee れ 4 ⅵ′å nQi れ冶ね . co れ 10 「 012066 236 ( 斤託 Dial) 0 「 2-51-27FAtago , Minato-ku,Tokyo 105 227. Ad 朝 : Forinformatlon and rates, Hong KongTelephone ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. Orvisit: ゼ01可れ0.com/れ漏始物忙 ReBfiTt: lnformation is available attime.com/dnwreprints. To request custom repnnts,vlsitdmerepr/n&. G0宿ル M 伽胸 t : We make a 虍 on ofourmailing listavailable to reputable firms. げ u would prefer that 、肥 not include your name, please contact ou 「 Customer Services Center. TIME Asia is edited in Hong Kong and pnnted in Singapore and Hong Kong. MCI (P) No. 058 / 08 / 2016. Malaysia KKDN permit no. PPS 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ). 2 TIME JuIY31, 2017

3. TIME 2017年7月31日号

を対 : = 朝 1 0 H R ー S す 0 P H E R N 0 [ A N ' S G R E A す W A R B Y E 凵 Z A B E R M A N No れ , 46 , as built 0 career making smartfilms 市砒 are so blockbusters. His 10thfeature, Dunkirk, the British-American director's most ambitious yet. He spoke t0 TIME 0b0 砒 how 0 れ d why he made thisfilm OW H ー S 10 R ー C A R E S E A R C H Ⅳ 0 〃 0 れ d va Hoytemapored overphotos た e these as well as newsreelfoo tage れ d firsthand accounts. But 市 avoided direct replication. ' ア ou come up with 0 language 市砒沁 not self-conscious 0 れ d thatfeelspure, ” says va れ日 0 ア tema , ツ ou enter 0 scene andjust believe れ . ' part Ofthe national DNA. lt's in your bones as a Over the past decade, you've made movies BritiSh person. You receive the story first in its that take place ⅲ the DC Comics universe, more mythic, somewhat oversimplified terms. within the human subconscious and 0 収 t in The more you find out about the reality ofthe space. Why come back tO earth, tO history? Dunkirk is one Ofthe great untOld stories in evacuation, the more you find out ab out the modern C1nema. Having made a trip on a small me ssy historical truth of the thing. boat across the Channel about 25 years ago, the roughness ofthe water, the sheer physical DO yo 収 think there's a particular reason challenge of making that crossing—but without why the story hasn't been 亡 01d ⅲ film? Yes, I dO. What I realize in retrospect is this is anyone dropping bombs, without traveling a British 61m ー it has no Americans in it—but f intO a war zone—cemented in my mind an ま extraordinarily high level 0f admiration for the it needs the Hollywood studio machine t0 be able to make something technically on the people wh0 ⅲ 1940 just got 0 Ⅱ those little boats scale that's necessary tO dO this storyjustice. and came over tO help the soldiers. l've always seen Dunkirk as a universal story, something that anybody could relate to. But Growing up ⅲ Britain, what was your the reason why it hasn't been made before is it perception Of the events at Dunkirk? ln Britain, you grow up with this story. lt's really requires such massive resources. 41

4. TIME 2017年7月31日号

TimeOff 'SHOULD THEY TELL PAT ABOUTALAN'S INFIDELITY?' —NEXT PAGE Painting the town: Latifah, H 4 Pinkett Smith 0 〃 d Haddish ofgirls link arms and stride into the IN THE PAST YEAR OR SO, WE'VE seen SO many women-behaving- club in a sassy slO-mo strut—is really badly comedies—Rough Night and just a cheap junk tiara. Snatched are two ofthe most recent— You could be forgiven for thinking that you'd think women had only MaIcoIm D. Lee's GirIs Trip is just just discovered the pleasures Of another entry in this exhausted genre. And no matter what, consider yourself he ading out with frie nds , with hair forewarned that the moue's gags, teased high and necklines plunging 10W , for a debauched night on the and itS language, re ach a sailors-on- leave level ofcrudeness. Yet GirIs Trip town. But these movies have been succeeds where the others have failed. disappointments, and their novelty lt's hard to say whether that's thanks has worn thin. Past a certain point, it's no fun watching women drink tO the tO Lee's characteristically breezy, limits Of consciousness or puke their no-sweat direction (he's the writer- director behind the Best イ comedies guts out. ln trying tO prove they c an as well as the director ofthejubilant be as wild as the guys, the women in blaxploitation parody Undercover these movies mostly just settle intO Brother) or tO the movie's buoyant and a tired pattern Of self-humiliation. superbly matched cast. Most likely it's The alleged payoff ofthese pictures— a secret cocktail combo ofboth. Girls generally telegraphed by the Trip isjust fun, a movie that—even obligatory moment ⅲ which a bunch MOVIES Buoyant, breezy and brassy, Girls Trip never trips up By Stephanie Zacharek コ V の > 一 N コ 45

5. TIME 2017年7月31日号

the planet. "Aksener is the Hillary CIinton 0fTurkey's presidential election; ” says Turkish political analyst Selim Sazak. "Everyone kinda sorta wants Aksener in power, but she's like prune juice. lt's good for your health, but it's not appetizing. At the same time, there are precious few candidates in Turkey with a legitimate shot at challenging E rdogan. Dissident leaders within Erdogan's party have failed to step forward and challenge the President. Others have paid bitterly for their defiance. S elahattin D emirtas, for example, the popular leader ofthe pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), is now in prison on terrorism charges after he and at least 10 other lawmakers from his partywere arrested in November 2016. ln her interview with TIME, Aksener broke with her nationalist brethren and criticized the arrests Ofthe pro- Kurdish lawmakers. "Erdogan is trying tO threaten Kurdish society. That is why he put them injail right before the referendum; ” She said. Aksener herselfhas not esc 叩 ed the government fury. Pro-government media have assailed her With salacious claims about her personallife. She has received death threats. She regards the smears and threats as an orchestrated traditionalistviews on women. 'He pre- campaign tO scare her, She says. fers us at home,: ” she says. April 2016 , they've been trying t0 get me Aksener served tWO terms 1 Ⅱ to back down, and I haven't. ' parliament with the MHP and became Opposition figures believe the deputy speaker ofthe assembly, where has a long association with some Ofthe government will simply find a way t0 harder edges ofTurkish politics; after colleagues remember her as someone stop Aksener. "Anyb0dy whose name who formed friendships across party she was forced out ofofflce ⅲ the 1997 is mentioned as a possible presidential lines and crackedjokes while chairing coup, Aksener re-entered parliament a candidate, all ofthese goons and trolls the parliament's sessions. But she split decade later as a member ofthe right- and media people, they'll d0 smear with the MHP leadership ⅲ 2016 over wing Nationalist Action Party (MHP), campaigns tO disqualify them; ” a senior Erdogan's bid t0 transform Turkey 's which trace s its origins tO the brutal HDP offlcial said. constitution. lnstead ofjoining her party past ofTurkey's far right. She has been Aksener has yet t0 decide whether in backing the President, Aksener gave compared t0 Marine Le Pen, leader 0f she'll put her head above the parapet and VOice tO a dissident faction and mounted France's National Front. Yet she rejects take Erdogan on. Since the referendum an ultimately unsuccessful challenge t0 any comparison between her style ofpol- campaign, she has bided her time' cook- the party's leadership. She has now le 仕 itics and the racism Ofthe European far ing and going for long walks with her the MHP behind. "I closed that ch 叩 ter; ” right. "We don't d0 politics based on race husband outside her lstanbul home. One she told reporters onJuly 3. or ethnicity; ” she says. "Our definition 0f thing she won't d0, she says, is flee. She the nation iS based on shared memories, has no passport, and ifErdogan's author- NO 、 AKSENER IS CONSIDERING a bid shared ties and sharedjoys. ” She is com- ities show up tO arrest her along with the for leadership ofher country under a mitted tO institutions and procedure, many thousands ofothers perceived tO new banner. She is far from a perfect ⅲ contrast with Erdogan's emotional have crossed him, she will again d0 what political candidate; she counts her populism. "Erdogan's world is black and she is supposed t0 d0. "Be my guest; ” white,: ” she says. "I don't believe in the deep experience in government as an she says. "l'm here. " —With reporting 妙 advantage, at a time when outsiders rule of right and wrong. I believe ⅲ the seem tO be sweeping elections around VILDAN AY/ISTANBUL rule oflaw. ” She also criticizes Erdogan's 0 Aksener 砒 her home ⅲ lstanbul ⅲ May ロ 11

6. TIME 2017年7月31日号

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7. TIME 2017年7月31日号

2 . A N 0 , A ー R A N 0 5 E A Va 0 ア tema inter- wove the perspectives ofmyriad soldiers 妙 shootingfrom ″ three vantage points. He attached cameras tO the sides 可 s ⅲ flight 0 れ d shot d - held cameras 0 d boats, using mo on tO create 0 れ undulating sense 0 工 0 れ工 ie 収 . 1 M00 物 $ ー OW を ~ many 0f them are the actual Dunkirk LittIe his colleagues but little for himself. We can read Ships, venerable, elderly, lovingly preserved his mind, even though it's protected by layers boats that were part ofthe rescue in 1940. They of leather and shearling. And his ultimate act have names like ElVin and caro れ ia , Endeavour is a doozy—no less than what we expect from and Ma ワれ e. ln one terrifying scene, soldiers this man we hardly know,. traveling safely and happily on a large transport The casting ofDunkirk is near perfect. From ship, eating jam on bread and drinking mugs Hardy t0 Keoghan, from RyIance to Harry 0f tea as they look forward to reaching the ir Styles, the pop star who plays one ofthe young home shores, suddenly and brutally face death soldiers, the picture is filled with great EngIish by drowning. One man struggle s underwater, faces. But to call them characteristically EngIish and the moment would be like any other faces is wrong. Remember, they're supposed to terror-at-sea image except for a staggering, be the faces ofmenwho lived more than 75 years barely glimpsed detail: he does not let go of ago. T0day the face of EngIand—Iike that of his tin mug. France or any Other European country—is much Dunkirk is about suffering and bravery, more racially mixed. Love Of country comes about individuals whO care less about with no color or birthplace attached. Nolan themselves than about a greater good. To them, doesn't address that idea directly—the story of isolationism would be an affront. One of the Dunkirk is almost exclusively about white men, movie S most heroic faces iS one we barely see.• something that can't be changed after the fact. Tom Hardy plays RAF pilot Farrier. He spends But his approach opens out to it implicitly. Late most Of the movie with an aviator helmet ⅲ the film, a British commander played by a clamped on his head and a mask drawn across stalwart Kenneth Branagh, knowing that nearly his mouth. The intensity Of his performance Of his own men have been rescued, makes is built almost completely with gestures. He an executive pronouncement: He Will not leave waves or nods t0 his colleagues as they skim by stranded French soldiers behind. His EngIand, in their Spitfires, and even when they seem too even then, was part Ofa greaterwhole, and that far away tO read his meaning, you re sure that made him no less English. they d0. He casts an apprehensive glance at his If you see Dunkirk for Ⅱ 0 Other reason, see busted fuel gauge. ()e makes chalk marks on it for its vision Of the faces of men who took the dashboard to keep track ofhow muchjuice action, without having any idea Of what the he has le 庇 ) Somehow his eyes, even though we world would become. AII they knew was that can't always see them clearly, betray worry for they wanted the best for it. ロ 40 TIME JuIy 31 , 2017

8. TIME 2017年7月31日号

Reviews Time Off within the context Of its broad, exaggerate d humor—never seems tO be trying tOO hard. You've seen the setup before, probably only a few weeks ago ifyou've darkened the doors Of a movie theater. Four best friends from college, now edging toward middle age, reunite after falling out oftouch. Regina Hall's Ryan Pierce, a successful writer and aspiring heir- t0-Oprah TV star, has been invited tO work her magic at the Essence Festival in New Orleans, and she decides that this might be a good time to get the old gang, known as the Flossy Posse, together. Sasha (Queen Latifah), formerly a successful journalist, now runs a gossip site— work that doesn't make her particularly happy. Lis a (Jada Pinkett S mith) is the divorce d mom who lives for her children and has fallen into premature frumpiness. Dina (the glorious Tiffany Haddish) marks time at an offce job, but she reallyjust lives to have a good time. Of the four she's the one with the dirtiest mouth and the one most likely to take wild chances. Her wardrobe iS a menagerie Of neon animal prints, and she favors hoop earrings the size Of cruise-ship portholes. 'Women are just Even though Ryan has as lascivious a reputation t0 uphold, the women waste no and sexual as time in getting up tO men, and they no good, hitting the want tO let loose club s in their tighte st and have fun. ' dresses and highest MALCOLM D. LEE, Loubs. (Timid Lisa is director Of Girls Trip, the one whO needs the in Entertainment Week/y predictable makeover: her defense ofher dowdy skirt, ostensibly hand-embroidered by GuatemaIan artisans, is one 0fthe movie's funniest bits. ) Girls Trip contains the most outrageous depiction Of public urination l've ever seen—but I mean that as a recommendation, not a deterrent. There's the obligatory ridiculous white girl (played by Kate WaIsh). But face it—white girls are pretty funny. And yet, in the end, the movie is generous toward her, as it is tO all its characters. These women learn life lessons, sure. One ofthem gives a loser guy the gate, and another scales a long-overdue career overhaul. Through it all, they laugh, scream and mime unbelievably dirty sex acts. But the overall mood is one Ofjoy and catharsis rather than self-inflicted debasement. This is a girls'-night- out comedy that doesn't leave you feeling depleted and insulted. GirIs Trip has tall shoes to 6 Ⅱ , and it never stumbles. 46 TIME JulY31, 2017 0 れ d れ e iS a message from a lost world: the 1990S THERE'S NO SUCH THINGAS THE PERFECT FAMILY. BUT when you're a teenager, any family seems better than the one you ve got. That's the territory mined by writer-director Gillian R0bespierre and co-writer Elisabeth HOlm in も 0 れ卍ⅲ e , set ⅲ New York City in the mid-1990s, when people still used pay phones and bought music at Tower Records. This was also before smartphones gave us a handy excuse to stop looking each other ⅲ the eye. Although where there's a will, there's a way: perpetually irritable teenager Ali (Abby Quinn) can't stand her mother, hardworking, distracted pat (Edie FaIco). She also grows t0 despise her father Alan (John Turturro), an advertising copywriter who'd rather be a playwright, when she discovers a cache oflove poems that suggest he's having an affair. She confides in her older sister Dana (Jenny SIate), whO's suffering from some relationship trauma Ofher own and temporarily moves back tO the family apartment to sort things out. Ali's prickliness drives the tWO youngwomen apart, but they broker an une asy pe ace when they weigh a tough question : Should they tell Pat about Alan's infidelity? Robespierre directed the tender and extraordinary 2014 comedy Obvious Child (also co-written with H01m, also starring Slate), and while this picture doesn't have the same quiet-earthquake impact, it's just as emotionally open and just as funny. At one point Ali storms out 0fthe house angrily, and Pat, in that deadpan-comic tone parents use when they send their kids out tO face wolves (orjust the world), worries aloud that she'll probably get mugged. AIan assures her that that won't happen: "She's too scary. " You laugh, but it hurts a little tOO. lt's clear Ali is no fun to live with, and Robespierre and HoIm redirect our sympathies from one family member to another gracefully. The actors are all terrific: as Ali, Quinn has a radiant wildcat sweetness—there's fragility behind all that hissing. And Slate, with her marvelous, helium-tinged voice, is a pure pleasure tO watch. At one point she responds tO a friend's outrageous dating tale with a classic spit-take. Somehow she makes it bOth elegant and hilarious. —STEPHANIE ZACHAREK Slate ⅲ Landline; the wa. we were, before smgr 中 0 れ e & MOVIES LEE: GETTY IMAGES; LANDLINE: MAGNOLIA; SPIDER-MAN: SONY; RI 工 ANNA. VALERIAN 】 UNIVERSAL ロ

9. TIME 2017年7月31日号

both parties. Local Republicans publicly alleged that Democrats were ignoring the issue and privately accused them 0f try- ing tO suppress the GOP vote. Democrats thought Republicans were makingup an excuse for their losses at the county polls. "That was a big concern,' says Hestrin, an elected Republican. "People should still have faith in our election systems. ltwas only months later that it dawned on investigators in D. C. that undermining voters' faith may have been the point 0f the Riverside County hack all along. ln the months following the California primaries, the feds discovered that Russian hackers had broken intO more than 20 state and local election systems and attempted tO alter voter registration ⅲ several of them. Looking back at the events in Riverside County, cybersecurity offcials at the White House wondered whether it had been a test run by the Russians. "lt 100ked like a cyberattacker testing what kind of chaos they could unleash on Election Day; ” says one former federal cybersecurity offcial who looked intO the case. "There was no forensic evidence, SO we may never know for sure, but the intelligence told us the Russians were bragging about doing just that. ” lt is easy tO forget, in the constant flurry of news, that the abiding goal of the Russian operation against the 2016 presidential election was, in the words Of the U. S. intelligence community, "to undermine public faith in the U. S. demo- cratic process. ” What unfolded from early spring 2016 through the close ofpolls on NOV. 8 in states and counties across Amer- ica was an aggressive attack on the credi- bility ofour elections and a largelyunseen and futile attempt by the federal govern- ment tO counter it. The FBI, the Depart- ment of Homeland Security (DHS) and U. S. intelligence services worked to iden- tify the hackers and determine how wide- spread their malicious influence opera- tionwas. The feds struggled to help states protect their ballOt machines and VOter- registration rolls, only tO become sus- pected of election meddling themselves amid mounting partisanship. ln the end, realizing there was little they could d0 t0 stop what they feared might be a final Rus- sian attack on the vote, the feds worked up an extraordinary plan t0 limit the dam- age on Election Day and in the days after. The previously undisclosed 15-page 24 TIME July 31 , 2017 plan, produced by President Obama's cybersecurity offcials and obtained by TIME, shows just how worried Washington was. lt deferred tO states in most cases Of a cyberincident on Election Day. But in a severe attack "likely t0 result in demonstrable impact tO election infrastructure," it provided for "enhanced procedures ” in response. The plan allowed for the deployment of armed federal law enforcement agents ” to polling places if hackers managed to halt voting. ln a crisis, it also foresaw the deployment 0f "Active and Reserve military forces ” and members 0f the National Guard "upon a request from a federal agency and the direction of the Secretary Of Defense or the President. ” For three days after the election, a special interagency effort would be tasked with addressing "any postelection cyber- incidents; ” including planted stories calling intO question the results. ” On Nov. 1 , the White House went so far as tO war-game an Ele ction D ay at- tack. Over the course Of five hours, the National Security Council ran a fictional- ized sequence Of events tO rehearse hOW federal agencies would communicate and respond in a real attack. Some Ofthe sce- narios dealt with actual VOte meddling, while others focused on disinformation efforts tO undermine the election. As the nightmare scenarios unfolded—from voters turned away tO violence at polling places—the team went over what actions each agencywould take andwhat the legal constraints were on what they could dO. As it happened, Nov. 8 came and went with no final, spectacular attack on the integrity 0fthe election. But the Russian effort may nonetheless be working, helped wittingly or otherwise by Donald Trump. Most Americans believe that their own votes will be correctly counted, but WHILE INSIDE, THE HACKERS ー R に 0 す 0 ALTER AND DELETE INFORMATION ー THE VOTER ROLLS their faith that elections are honest is collapsing. ln 2009 , 59 % 0f Americans had confidence inthe honesty ofelections, while 40 % did not, according to Gallup. By 2015 , those numbers had flipped, andjust before the November vote, amid Trump's repeated talk ofrigged elections and the widespread coverage Of Russian hacking, Gall 叩 found that only 30 % of Americans had confidence in the honesty of our elections, while 69 % did not. The diminished faith may deepen. Recent revelations and testimony have shown that the Russian operation tar- geting state and IOC al voting systems was broader and more intrusive than previ- ously thought. They have also shown that our election systems remain vulnerable to different kinds of attack designed to undermine not the vote count itself but America's faith in the result. Which is why the story ofhow offcials scrambled tO secure the 2016 vote only tO become mired in partisan suspicion iS important. Because the question 0f U. S. vulnerabil- ity t0 election meddling is less about the past VOtes than it is about the next ones. RUSSIA'S DANGEROUS NEW GAME ABOUT THREE WEEKS AFTER THE Riverside County hack, a Russian agent signed on tO the voter-registration web- site Of one oflllinois's 109 election Juris- dictions , each Of which has its own VOt- ing system. But instead Of entering his personal information in one Ofthe fields for names and addresses, the hacker up- loaded a string Of malicious prewritten COde, executing a ClassiC hack known as SQL injection. With that, the hacker opened a back door to all 15 million files on past and current voters in the state since 2006. And for nearly three weeks, no one knew he was there. Such intrusions weren't entirely new. Russia had been probing U. S. state and local electoral systems for years. ln 2008 , Moscow hacked the campaigns of both Obama and John McCain. Then, in 2014 , the Russians became more brazen. "Previously, when you discovered the Russians somewhere, they disappeared like ghosts—poof!" says Michael Daniel, former White House cybersecurity coordinator. "After 2014 , you'd find them in networks, and they'd stay, almost like they were taunting us. Theybecame much

10. TIME 2017年7月31日号

Time Off Reviews Bomer, i れ g 0 genius producer with hand ⅲ everything, watches over hiS stars as FX's Feud: Bette 0 d れ . lts side storie s include the megastar (Jennifer Amazon tries tO complete F. SCOtt Beals) with a secret, the bratty child Fitzgerald's unfinished novel star (Chloe Guidry) who is fed drugs to perform. Even thudding hints at what's By DanieI D'Addario t0 come for the characters land gently. We see portents ofthe future in large successful man. Success as a producer part by meeting chic Fritz Lang and THE LAST TYCOON, AN UNFINISHED novel by F. Scott FitzgeraId published followed. Women want to be with him, Marlene Dietrich. ℃ 00 れ is as sweetly in 1941 , a year after his death, is a and men want t0 beat him—specifically, addictive as box-offce candy. nervy piece 0f work. The draft j itters Kelsey Grammer's Pat Brady, a rival And yet I wish there were more. with desperation, as if Fitzgerald were executive consumed byjealousy. ツ C00 れ , like Amazon's less entertaining trying tO craft, sentence by sentence Bomer, the star of White Co ″ 0 ら but equally glamour-glutte d Zelda and aphorism by aphorism, a hit. The is amiably blank. He convinces you Fitzgerald dramaZ: The Beginning 可 perspective shifts almost at random that Monroe responds tO various Everything, is a diverting series that uses and the plot, about a movie executive psychological torments, including being history the way revelers at a Gatsby- with barely hidden vice s , skitters away a widower, by adopting the pose of themed party today use a strand offake from its author's control. lt's plainly vacuousness. That he left me wanting pearls. ツ C00 れ tosses it on as a way tO unfinished but んⅡ of neuro se s and vastly more is maybe the point—as show that the past was different but also passion. That is to say, んⅡ oflife. that's hOW everyone whO meets him fun! Fitzgerald is often remembered ln adapting it for the screen, Amazon seems tO feel, including Pat's wife, Rose, beyond the classroom for the romantic has made a show that feels the opposite. played by an aching Rosemarie DeWitt. drama ofhis life and times. But he wrote The first season ofThe Last ℃ 00 And as Pat's daughter Celia Brady, the with crackling acuity about los ing love unfolds slowly, taking time to nod ambitious young would-be producer and losing one's mind and, above all, at every aspect Ofthe moviemaking wh0 is the novel's real protagonist, LiIy about the curse ofliving ⅲ the past. industry and LOS Angeles society in the C011ins has the sort of rising gumption Amazon's The Last ℃ 00 れ is about a 1930S. lt's beautiful—and damned ifyou any fan ofJudy Garland will recognize. man who's good at his job and—contrary compare it tO itS source material. She resists the urge tO put a topspin of t0 Fitzgerald's view ofthe human Title aside, the ShOW seems more millennial irony on the role. And she condition—the pleasure ofretreating influenced byMad Men than by sells this show's devotion to an idea of intO historical fantasy.. lt's a missed Fitzgerald's works. Monroe Stahr (Matt the past as impossibly elegant. opportunity. One that, after a gorgeous Bomer) is a sort ofproto—Don Draper. The show will appeal to fans of 10 hours, you may not remember. Born t0 a scornful father, he changed OId HoIIywood. lt's as lavish a re- THE LAST TYCOON wi 〃 stream on Amazon his name and affected the mien ofa creation ofthe bygone La La Land starting on 」 y 28 48 TIME July 31 , 2017 TELEVISION T 工 E LAST TYCOON: AMAZON; OZARK: NETFLIX; LINNEY: GETTY IMAGES