Climb up and down

General 2022-10-29 10:01:32

Season 1 clients are ordinary criminals, season 2 clients are high-level criminals or even super criminals, and season 3 is about fighting law enforcement and then, at the last minute, questioning the meaning of the courts and the law. In the first season, the heroine was not afraid of hardships and hard work in pursuit of the honor of the royal lawyer and never gave up. She couldn't understand that a pregnant woman who sold drugs could get away with her crime but would rather plead guilty just to go to prison for asylum. In the second season, she still struggled hard. She thought that the higher the rank, the greater the freedom, the greater the power and the greater the ability to maintain justice. Who knows that a mountain is still a mountain high, drug lords can control prisons and lawyers, aristocrats can override the law, and more and more complicated cases and plaintiffs and defendants who are no longer absolutely black and white. You have me, I have you, and you keep silent about the truth, because those laws cannot cover it, the court cannot make a judgment, the prosecutor cannot prosecute, and the police cannot crack down on it. Unspeakable reasons. , Does the heroine think that becoming a royal lawyer means a more comfortable life? Maybe. Look at the three royal lawyers defending college students, they are well-paid and well-paid, they just need to put the Liar hat on the witness and win. Regardless of the professional level of lawyers, even if they only need their high school education level to deal with waiters who may only be able to work in restaurants since childhood, they can be eloquently crushed. Too bad the heroine is not like that. She is more fanatical about excusing her clients and pursuing the truth more persistently. for Brendan Kay's exoneration requires Brendan to tell the truth, and then Brendan has to die. The audience knows this, but Martha doesn't. She may be very new to this field, because she does not know and does not believe that there can be any right that anyone can be above the law. She felt that exoneration was fair to Brendan, because he was a manipulated child. But isn't her encouragement, encouragement and comfort to Brendan a manipulation of an ignorant child? Brendan has no judgment on pros and cons, he's only good-hearted, he's always honest. So no matter what Brendan should say, should not say, the heroine should help him get rid of his crime, and shouldn't help him get rid of his crime, and in the end it became a dilemma. After all, Martha was taking care of the child in the way she thought was the most correct. And maybe in jail, Brendan would still die. We have no way of knowing. Of course, Brendan's death made Martha realize that the drug lord was for real. She may not really be afraid, but she finally opened her eyes and saw something that the legal world could not see before. However, at this time, she was not disappointed. She felt extremely angry, but she couldn't fight back, so she had no choice but to stop running in the muddy water. Billy is very tired, but he has to withstand the pressure and help Martha avoid the recruitment of the drug lord. By season three, law enforcement was the antithesis. In fact, in the second season, Martha has found from some lawsuits that the police will forge the evidence for the convenience of law enforcement, in order to lay a net to catch the criminal, or even simply falsify the evidence just because the criminal cannot be brought to justice by normal means, which is also framed. One kind. In fact, it is right to bring criminals to justice. But procedural justice, a part of legal justice, is challenged. If the opponents in the second season can still be crushed, then the opponents in the third season are really prepared, and the level has improved a lot. Of course, there is also a very strange thing about the heroine in the third season, that is, she is becoming more and more emotional, less and less calm about the case, and less and less objective with the client. It takes a lot of effort for her to maintain the rational. The heroine is already almost paranoid in pursuit of truth and justice, but all the people and things are preventing her from getting close to the truth, and more and more uncontrollable factors come in, which not only disturbs the case, but also disturbs the heroine belief. In the last episode of the second season, she made a deal with the devil, her motives are still positive, and the truth is indeed in line with the verdict, but the heroine's defense line already has loopholes. At the beginning of the first episode of the third season, she has already collapsed once. The timeline in the show is one year after the second season finale. She must have been After seeing enough laws being challenged, but unable to save the defeat, unable to maintain justice. With the attitude of a moth to the fire, she will continue to fight for her customers and strive for the best interests. However, gone are the days of casually crushing the control party and easily helping clients get out of the way. She is constantly compromising and constantly talking to her clients. It may have been enough to talk once before, but now it takes several more talks to get the truth out of the client. Clive has learned it once, and already feels that this method makes him exhausted (he never has a day of exhaustion when dealing with women), you can imagine how tiring it is to talk to a client N times now. . More importantly, you show your sincerity to your customers and let them trust you to rely on you. Accordingly, you will also have unconditional trust and dependence on your customers. Talking once can be a play, and talk several times. . . So Martha's emotional out-of-control and paranoia about helping customers is understandable. In the first two seasons, Martha still went home to work overtime. In the third season, every time she worked overtime, she saw the office scene. Hit, get tired, invest in feelings, be sad, and hit again. The intern in the third season is not strong, but a person's excessive concentration and madness will isolate himself from the people around him. Clive confessed several times like never before, only to be rejected or even indifferent. Billy was reluctant to talk about his condition, but Marsha didn't care any further, and didn't drink and talk at the bar as usual. She didn't call her mother, she didn't call her grandpa (still grandpa), her world only had cases. But these cases are still so bad. She doesn't know that there are still people in this world who love her, she is just burning herself. Burn yourself for what? For the law and justice, fairness and truth that I still believe in. These things still remained in her heart, shattered by reality again and again, and she regrouped and charged forward again and again. However, the case of her ex-boyfriend became the last straw that crushed her. All the words of the ex-boyfriend are lies, except for the sentence "I didn't kill him". Martha kept asking, kept getting false information, and then was crushed in court, overwhelmed by the sudden truth of the case. In the end, she finally got all the truth of the case, and found that the truth of the case was not the truth. There is also a crushing news, that is, her every move, every word and deed, the real criminals are in control. She, a royal lawyer, thinks she can get the truth through hard work, but it turns out that the truth is always in the hands of the criminals. The police don't have it, the prosecutor doesn't have it, the judge doesn't have it, the law doesn't have a book, the truth is only in the hands of criminals. and The heroine knew the truth because the criminal's agent risked her death to tell her. The judge and the court also made the jury ignore the truth statement because the truth cannot provide evidence. How ironic. How sad. This, Micky Joy understands. So he was gloomy and unscrupulous. (It's ironic that his surname is Joy, Micky is a derived name of Michael, Michael means "no one is like God", and Michael is also an archangel who fights the devil in the Bible.) At this point, Martha suddenly saw , so her faith collapsed, she was finally exhausted physically and mentally, questioning the career she had been pursuing, and also questioning: "Who am I?" Some people said that she went home, so she eventually disappeared from the sight of Billy and Jake. Yes, she needs to go back to the original starting point to think about who she is, where she came from, where she is going, and what she is after. Clive is loving Martha's, I don't doubt it. But Billy loves her and understands her, that's why she can find where she is. Martha finally turned around, took two steps forward, looked at Billy who was being supported by Jake, and knew that someone could take good care of Billy, so she could say goodbye. It's not that she doesn't love Billy, it's not that she doesn't know that Billy loves her, even Billy is seriously ill, he needs her, but she doesn't belong here anymore, this is Billy's home, it used to be her home, and it won't be anymore. Corrections are welcome. ps Given Name MARTHA: From Aramaic מַרְתָּא (marta') meaning "the lady, the mistress", feminine form of מַר (mar) "master". In the New Testament this is the name of the sister of Lazarus and Mary of Bethany ( who is sometimes identified with Mary Magdalene). She was a witness to Jesus restoring her dead brother to life.

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