It's really hard to see episodes like this right now - where you can totally grab your attention without wasting a minute of your audience's time
Even someone like me who is often distracted can sit here and watch for hours on end
The language of the shots, the editing, the lines, the makeup, the scenery, the actors' expressiveness, and the details are all well-crafted beyond what you'd expect from a TV episode
The character building is also reasonable
For example, Claudia has a strong personality since childhood
Hannah has always been this kind of setting, when she was a child, she went to inform and grow up to blackmail.
Charlotte grew up observing the details of things, so she became one of the few protagonists who actively discovered time travel.
Detective Egon has been kind all his life, but he is confused by what his daughter calls such a "good person that the world doesn't deserve". At the last moment of his life, he has not solved this seemingly inexhaustible mystery that accompanies his life.
Personality is difficult to change, but the situation is different, maybe the idea will change, such as Jonas
dark contains theology, philosophy, science (sci-fi, not too scientific) and the study of human nature
Finally gave you a chance to think about life
A concept that recurs in the play, the trajectory of life is set
Does it make you think like this? Is there a set trajectory we can't easily get out of? Who the hell decides this track?
God or ourselves?
Like Detective Clausen asking Alexander in the interrogation room "Why do people in this town choose to stay here?"
Yes why?
Of course it's just an episode a metaphor can't give you the answer but at least
Gives you an opportunity and angle to think about
You think it's shocking but you don't know how to express this admiration
The metaphor of philosophical science fiction is the reflection of the current situation of people into a future scene
In the play Adam talks about the three demises of life, loss of innocence, loss of innocence, loss of life
It is the three necessary stages of life
To lose innocence is to be exposed to and begin to understand the complexity of people and things
To lose innocence is to be involved in the complexity of people and things.
In the end your life is gone and you are but a knot in this infinite complexity
ps: other things that dark reminds me of
These two episodes of Claudia and Jonas trying to save their father
Reminds me of a scene in The Matrix The Prophet said to Keanu Reeves don't mind the vase thing Keanu Reeves asked what vase? Then as soon as he stepped back and accidentally knocked off the vase, the prophet asked him if I didn't mention the vase, would you still break it?
Some details in dark also remind me of the German movie Lola Run
The Lola Run begins with a quote "after the race is before the race"
At the same time, Lola Run also expresses the same idea of causality "somebody has to pay", which is also the name of the song at the end of Lola Run
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