Halfway through the second season, I can't watch it anymore... Do you feel the same way? ? ?

Zula 2022-04-03 09:01:12

I don't know why, the first season is very tight, but the second season...

the second season still embodies all kinds of struggles...but looking at it I think "Poison Master" is quite stupid a lot of times! ! ! ! ! !
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The most unacceptable is when Pickman gets "poisonous" The teacher" doesn't care about it! ! ! ! Nima, don't you know that the money you earn is just a bunch of fans without anyone selling it? Are you not a partner? You go to Pickman when you need help, and are you so ruthless when Pickman needs help?
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"Poison Master" madly wants to expand sales, occupy territory, completely ignore When Pickman said that he was worried, I sneered, and I finally thought—"Poison Master", you are a lunatic. I really don't know what the bald head is thinking.

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Extended Reading
  • Anthony 2022-04-02 09:01:15

    Not inferior to the first

  • Jerad 2022-03-28 09:01:14

    In addition to the scribbled arrangement of events at the end, the portrayal of Walter's inner evolution is really wonderful! His habit of power, thirst for money, and dissatisfaction with his situation all subtly change a person's fate. The light of good in the breeding of evil is still moving, but the foundation of black humor has more and more gray bubbles. The Midway Mexican Little Band was a genius. Jesse's personality is basically stereotyped, laying the foundation for the subsequent transformation.

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.