"Criminal Minds" has caught up with the big team, and now I watch one episode a week, and I don't think it's good enough to watch in batches. Star chasing is a process of continuous overweight. Once it stops, there is no strengthening force, and the enthusiasm retreats, and the relationship will be SO SO. The same is true for falling in love. Suddenly one day a person closed his eyes, and if he didn't show up again, he would end up in the melancholy of the white-headed palace maid talking about Xuanzong: Oh, I remembered, that year there was a little boy/girl who grew up like Tony Leung/ Maggie Cheung, eyes will discharge/a smile has rabbit teeth... Unfortunately, I haven't seen it since... "Criminal Minds" is also in me now: Oh, it's updated today, go check it out. On the plane again, wearing the black vest again. It starts as soon as you get on a plane and ends as soon as you wear a black vest. There will always be a serial murder case being solved, and it will no longer be of interest.
"Good Daughter-in-law" was also outstanding when watching the first season. There are many innuendos and infinite gossip, which can be compared with reality. Politician Peter's political scandals and sex scandals, his wife Alicia's persistent, clearly insinuated Clinton and Hillary; the second season Reno Award winner harassed masseuses and insinuated Gore's scandal; a SM lover escaped The accusation of murdering his wife is simply the famous Simpson...
Various cases, several campaigns, and the workplace competition between you and me, propped up this drama. So that Peter and Alicia are together or not, and Alicia and Will are separated or combined, it doesn't matter at all. Since the title of the play is "The Good Wife", the relationship between Alicia and Will can only be an episode. Watching this drama, I am more willing to watch the factional struggles and cases in the law firm. I have no interest in the love triangle at all, and even when I see the intimate scene between the two, I feel a sense of violation. Intimacy scenes appear in romance films as the finishing touch, and appear in romantic dramas as superfluous. There was a ten-minute gap between the two of them thinking about having a good time in the bathroom of the office, which made me feel inferior. Not because of Alicia's red apricots, but in the face of love, they should also maintain their posture. But cheating men and women never let go of any chance, just like the women in Jin Ping Mei Li, who are ready to mate at any time, so ugly that the readers are embarrassed.
Fortunately, halfway through the third season, Alicia decided to break up with Will. The partners of the law firm have been reorganized several times. Eli's cold-faced wit is inspiring, Diane's queen style is heart-breaking, Kalinda's mystery is sympathetic, and Cary's sudden righteousness and evil are admired. The supporting roles are all wonderful, and the end is a good drama.
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