Nazi Germany, 1940. Russian spy Alexander Belov is cool in a crisis. In a crisp white suit and tie, his hair immaculately coiffed, Belov infiltrates the SS headquarters in Berlin, assuming a German alias and manipulating his way to the top. His goal? To valiantly serve his country by intercepting Nazi war plans. But his mission was far from secret. Belov's face — or rather, that of actor Stanislav Lyubshin — was plastered on posters and televisions around the USSR. His adventures in intelligence were fantasies — and the central plot of the 1968 Soviet spy series, The Shield and...