How did the old movie "Second Spring" "fudge" a bunch of Western intelligence agencies?

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online statement: China has a mysterious organization called "Strategic Flicker Bureau". Of course, this statement is just a spoof on the Internet, but an old movie shot in the 1970s in our country really "fudged" Western intelligence agencies. What is going on here?

How did the old movie 'Second Spring' 'fudge' a bunch of Western intelligence agencies? - Lujuba

In 1975, the "Second Spring" filmed by Shanghai Film Studio was released, telling the story of Feng Tao, political commissar of a certain navy detachment, who was sent to the shipyard as secretary of the working committee and independently developed naval vessels. Many plots in "Second Spring" have reference significance to this day.

How did the old movie 'Second Spring' 'fudge' a bunch of Western intelligence agencies? - Lujuba

​​However, "Second Spring" has attracted the attention of Western intelligence agencies, especially the high-speed hydrofoil guided missile boat developed by Feng Tao in the film, the Sea Hawk. The Seahawk in the movie has an advanced shape and a six-pack new anti-ship missile that was rare in the world at that time.

How did the old movie 'Second Spring' 'fudge' a bunch of Western intelligence agencies? - Lujuba

Western intelligence agencies basically relied on "blind guesses" on the People's Liberation Army in the 1970s and really believed that the "Sea Eagle" in "Second Spring" did exist. Western intelligence agencies even supplemented all the technical parameters of the "028 Island Class Seahawk Missile Boat" based on the movie brain.

However, "Second Spring" was modified by filmmakers with the Type 62 escort boat commonly used by the People's Liberation Army at the time, and it was never a real weapon. The escort ship in the movie that was converted into the "Sea Hawk" was decommissioned in 2008 and scrap steel was recycled.

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