This is art!

Kimberly 2022-04-21 09:03:52

The second season is getting better. In the first season, there will be some naive golden finger bridges in the play, which are refreshing to poke the audience. For example, when he first started dealing with Tuco, Jesse was beaten, and Walter used a small bomb. I can't find any other explanation except for the protagonist's halo.

The second season is going to be a lot more thought-provoking. If I were to describe the plot of the second season, it would be like using one hand to clean the batter from the other hand, sweeping the batter off one finger, and the batter on the other hand, back and forth , is not always clean. Most of the time, as a viewer, I felt pain and struggle, and it was terribly distressing. Should I do bad things for my family? This TV show has already given the answer.

1. An ever-increasing number of lies destroys an otherwise harmonious family. In order to make drugs, Walter is often not at home, so he has to weave lies to tell his wife the reason why he is not at home. But the lie will not be seamless, the wife senses it, feels hidden, and then the relationship between the two gradually begins to crack. See, Walter's original intention was to leave a sum of money for his family and consider it for his family, but he has been busy for several months, but he has harvested a broken family. The results Walter got were the opposite of his hopes.

2. It is not easy to do bad things. There will always be unexpected difficulties, and most of these difficulties are difficult to solve. For example, dealing with the underworld, the underworld does not follow the normal social order of buying and selling, and uses violence to achieve its own goals. Walter and Jesse, who are helpless, if they are not the protagonists, they would have died long ago; for example , the gangsters who sell drugs will always be caught, and it is difficult to ensure that they are not exposed after being caught; for example, if they manufacture drugs dozens of kilometers away from the town, the ignition of the car is out of power. If it is not for Walter's natural intellect, Maybe two people died there.

3. A good-hearted person can't actually do bad things. For example, Jesse goes to confront the robber when his gangster's drugs are robbed. If Jesse is a jerk, then he won't have any struggles when killing people, but Jesse is a good person and also helps the robber take care of the children, even if he takes He couldn't shoot with a gun, but the opponent seized the opportunity to knock him down. If the two robbers hadn't had an infighting, Jesse might have ended up there. For example, the monkey was caught selling drugs. The monkey kills, they have much more money in their hands, and they have no risk, but they didn't choose that, they chose to save the monkey's life with a lot of money. When I saw it, I just thought it was very difficult, good people really can't do bad things.

In short, this is definitely not an easy dinner drama, this is a drama you should watch when you want to be deeply touched and want to sit there and think about life. This is art!

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Extended Reading

Seven Thirty-Seven quotes

  • Walter White: [showing Jesse a baggie of castor beans] We are going to process them into ricin.

    Jesse Pinkman: Rice and beans?

    Walter White: Ricin. It's an extremely effective poison. It's toxic in small doses. Also fairly easy to overlook during an autopsy.

    Jesse Pinkman: All right. All right. So...

    Walter White: [slapping his hand away] Don't touch them.

    Jesse Pinkman: Seriously, you can get poisoned from beans?

    Walter White: Yes. Back in the late '70s, ricin was used to assassinate a Bulgarian journalist. The KGB modified the tip of an umbrella to inject a tiny pellet into the man's leg. And we're talking about an amount not much bigger than the head of a pin.

    Jesse Pinkman: But it... it killed him?

    Walter White: Oh, yes. Now we just need to figure out a delivery device, and then no more Tuco.

  • Hank Schrader: [at a crime scene] Oh, this is beautiful. Hey, someone call Jay Leno. We got the world's dumbest criminal. This guy wasn't murdered. Look. Big stuff here was, uh, moving this guy's body when the, uh... the stack must have shifted. Crushed his arm, pinned him here, and he, uh, he bled out.

    Steven Gomez: Poetic justic. Oh, I love it.

    Hank Schrader: Don't you just? Hey, hey, get a photo of me with this guy, all right?

    [posing next to the body]

    Hank Schrader: Old stumpy here. Make sure you get the stump in there.