The concepts of limited series, mini-series, and TV movies correspond to awards, separate and combined, it has you, you include it, and more is for better classification, measurement, and response to British dramas. Generally, there are only three episodes of British dramas. It is indeed as bizarre and paranoid as the British. Of course, I don't think a story or series must be three episodes. But as far as "Doing Nothing" is concerned, I think it's caught in a kind of embarrassment where the usual season-broadcast and movie-length episodes don't rely on either side, magnifying the shortcomings. It certainly can't be compared to "Big Little Lies," after all, it's about several women's families and children, interspersed, and murder, and it's only one more episode a season than "Do Nothing." If it is a movie, then all the auras should naturally be concentrated on Nicole's character. At the beginning, she should magnify her professional and family confidence. She believes that she knows the people around her and can control the balance of everything. But this self-confidence is slowly getting out of balance, but she still doesn't admit it, doesn't face it, still thinks she's a professional, and the temporary doubts are just a blindfold, but in the end, she has to face the "darkness under the lights" in her own psychological analysis. ". And if this is a season show, the role of the police or detective will increase, and they will treat everyone around them as suspects, not just a hint of seriousness. The people in the play have almost no reaction, just rely on an equally confident Defense attorneys spread questionable remarks there.
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