first appeared, it was a familiar, confusing and rather gloomy picture. Sand, drift bottles, and broken parts everywhere, accompanied by the squeezing sound of the spring, once again slowed the viewer's heartbeat. Even viewers who haven't seen the previous plot can quickly integrate into this weird atmosphere, which is the feature of this film's set.
In the last episode, Jesse drove to Lao Bai (W), but Tu Ku threatened Lao Bai in the back seat of the car to get in the car, and Lao Bai had to get in the car obediently. This is also the reason why the spring car flashed by at the beginning of the second episode, the two must have been taken to a wilderness.
In contrast, after Lao Bai left without saying goodbye, Kate was anxiously posting signs and looking for help from the police. A pregnant woman has a son with cerebral palsy, her sister has some mental illness, her husband had cancer and suddenly disappeared, but Kate didn't complain, didn't give up, and still tried her best to find it. This may be the reason why Lao Bai risked his life to make drugs. He couldn't abandon his family, and he couldn't leave his family with nothing to survive. Only by selling a large amount of drugs in a limited time can his family survive. But he knew that Kate would never agree to do that, so -- to hide the gulf that made Kate and him impossible to bridge.
At this time, the screen cuts back to Lao Bai and Jessie, who were locked in the trunk and thrown out by the slaughterhouse. Tu Ku took them to his home, there was nothing but a broken house and a wheelchair-bound, paralyzed old man who had a bell under his command - Tu Ku's father. What makes people strange is that he put his father in such an uninhabited place, but bowed his head and kissed him. Did he really love his father, or did he use it as a refuge? One can't help but wonder whether such a big devil, a big drug lord, still has a conscience. But it doesn't matter anymore, because once again he made a misjudgment - he believed Old White and Jesse, which meant he didn't live long. Lao Bai first poisoned the slaughterhouse, but unfortunately his father discovered it. His father tried his best to ring the bell to remind the slaughterhouse, but unfortunately the slaughterhouse's response was still too slow, he just changed the plate. So Tu Ku's father swept the food to the ground. Such a demented, paralyzed old man is still struggling to save his son, which can make people feel his last love for his son. This is the same situation as Lao Bai and his son, and Jesse and his parents. In Western society, although father and son call their names directly, the weight of love is no less than that of families in Eastern societies.
It is a pity that the old Tuku is only an old man, and the sin of the Tuku is too heavy to save. First, he was shot by Jesse during a scuffle with Jesse, and then he was caught up by Hank (an anti-drug police officer) who found Jesse's spring car. Finally, he was shot and killed by Hank after a fierce battle. This big drug lord would never have thought that he would die so tragically, and maybe he would never put his father in such a place again. At the end of this episode, the bell rang faster and faster, but unfortunately no one would respond to him again.
I don't know why, but it makes me feel a little sad. This may be the wonderful thing about American dramas, where every character shows his soul.
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