Want everything, but get nothing

Elenora 2022-09-03 20:41:53

I don't know what kind of courage, but I can still see the third episode with support.

Too many grooves, the narrative is sloppy, and the feelings are meaningless

I watched 3 episodes, and I don't understand what the writer is doing?

The character Bette was written by the new screenwriter to stand up and talk about his love for Tina to comfort the old fans, and to have a relationship with a married woman for the so-called plot. There are always a few Tee's phone to sell cheap TB feelings. I really have no power to complain about the campaign. I never dig deep on the surface, and I won the support of education by saying a few empty words about diversity.…

The emotional lines of several other couples also made me feel that they lacked a sense of belief and could not see the feelings between them. Gives me a kind of bluntness of temporary partnering.

The story has no main line and no focus. If you talk about emotions, don’t talk about some irrelevant political words. If we talk about society, we must dig deep into the situation of the community and establish a deep definition.

In the third episode, we also saw a discussion about religion, but it was only a shallow taste.

It's good to have a play that is rich and diverse, but you can't want everything, and if you can't handle it well, you can't do anything well.

I saw the ambition of the screenwriter, but also the immaturity of the screenwriter.

A good work, the difficulty is not in the addition, but in the subtraction.

I want to cover everything in one go, but I can only touch on everything.

There is indeed a suspicion of "picking up sesame and throwing watermelon".

View more about The L Word: Generation Q reviews