Ridiculously true • Hope to find treasure in icy Minnesota one day

Alivia 2022-11-28 00:15:56

"Camus said we were going to die, and it made life seem like a joke."
"You have to be brave, you go to school, you go to work, you start a family..."
"And then die."

"I don't know what this plus Who is Miao, but I guess he doesn't have a six-year-old daughter." The

first season of "Frozen" took me several months to complete the drama, the plot unfolded by Wen Tunshui, and the audience knew it from the perspective of God. The ins and outs without suspense, as well as the intriguing IQ of the characters, made me almost quit the show for a while. I'm not a fan of the Coen Brothers, and I've never even touched their films before, and two seasons of "Frozen" made me fervently complete their films.

Fortunately, I am quite patient, and I always believe that dramas with such high ratings in major film and television reviews should have their own advantages. After gradually accepting, merging and even liking the style of the drama, everything began to gradually fade away. Into a good place, can't stop. Until the end of the whole play, I was left with an indescribable shock and indescribable, as well as complicated and indescribable reflections. Unspeakable - I believe those who have seen "Frozen" can understand it best. This is not a story that can be explained in one sentence.

The second season of "Frozen" has a faster and clearer rhythm than the first season. The development of the plot is advanced layer by layer, but it is complicated but clear and orderly; the characters are shaped with flesh and blood; I personally like this season to deal with these two aspects more than the first one season. The plot is more bold and absurd than the first season, and at the same time incorporates the background of the times, showing that the screenwriter is more open and ambitious in this season; the more absurd plot is a matter of opinion, I like the story based on the unease, loss and change of the 1970s in the United States As the background of absurd life, it is still a bit difficult to digest the plot of adding flying saucers, but the general flaws are not concealed. The style of philosophical thinking and quotations is consistent with the first season, which is the backbone of the two seasons of "Frozen".

It is also a protagonist who is in a hurry with IQ, but compared to the peanuts in the first season, Kristen Dunst is better in both role and acting skills. She and her stupid husband, Butcher, corresponded to the roles of Peanuts in the previous season, and the snowball effect caused by a small mistake at the beginning caused the incident to intensify and spiral out of control. The Lester played by Peanut is very annoying, compared to Kristen Dunst's Peggy, which is more accepted or even liked by everyone - including me (maybe it has something to do with acting, Peanut, please focus on shooting your Shen Xia, what about the fourth season?! ). Peggy is a married woman from an ordinary small town. She has ambition and ambition, and always wants to expand her knowledge and improve herself, but she is selfish and self-centered, and not very smart, which has created all the tragic deeds of the whole story; but I don't hate her, perhaps because I grew up with a similar background - a small town girl who is unwilling to be ordinary. Don't blame others for selfishness, stupidity, and ambition. To be honest, kind and intelligent requires resources - family, environment, people, culture, social atmosphere, information channels, etc. - anyone who has a little understanding of society knows that , our world has never, and probably won't have a day when resources are divided equally.

Peggy's hit-and-run is a more human weakness than Lester's murder, and most of us probably do that; although it's a bit nerve-racking to drive home with the hit man hanging on the windshield. After Peggy came home, he cooked food without incident, showing people's escapism and fluke in the face of difficulties. The crew just made a more exaggerated treatment, which also matched the absurd style of the show.

Peggy probably never wanted to be an ordinary wife. She is very nervous, and has always followed her own very unique way to interpret and deal with the things around her, but she is very persistent and persevering, so she is the most ridiculous in the whole story. One of the characters in the story also dragged her originally dull and down-to-earth husband into a series of absurd things. However, the series of disorder, impermanence, absurdity and nonsense caused by this couple is the most realistic portrayal of life, and even the husband and wife problem that finally surfaced is so real. Peggy was still talking about her California dream until the end, and in the background was the song of the California dream that changed the key (since Faye Wong's California dream in "Chongqing Forest", this song has become the most sensitive thing I have noticed in my film and television works. tune, this time again in a classic use). People may blame why Peggy can be so selfish and insensitive, no, it's not just Peggy, most of us often don't feel much when it's not about us and we don't feel pain; When a colleague's relatives and friends pass away, how much of the condolences you express are genuine grief? Not gloating, just not feeling it.

Aside from Peggy, the character that impressed me the most in Season 2 of Frozen was Milligan. Milligan is naturally not as good as the god-like mysterious killer Malvo in the first season. The crew should also know that it is impossible to copy a similar character, and simply change the style. From the beginning, Milligan makes people feel that he is a powerful gangster character. , but the whole play is almost picking up ready-made cheap, and the ending is ironic, black humor to the end. It has been said that the crew played very well this time, but it was rare that they did not go wrong. The implementation of black humor and central thinking did not get out of control.

The counterpart to Molly's cop character in season 1 is Molly's dad, and there's no better way to handle it. Father Lu has the character modeling of the first season, and the second season is naturally the safest and most appropriate role. The father policeman is more determined and sharp than the daughter policeman, and is absolutely upright. Molly in the first season was confused and frustrated. She reasoned and pushed forward layer by layer, making the plot first and then rising, creating a very gentle development of the early plot, but the ending was even more shocking. I still remember Molly going home after she successfully solved the case. The ordinary feeling of watching TV with her husband and daughter is so comfortable and moving; the second season is full of fast-paced dramas, which makes it easy to get involved in the plot from the very beginning. Father Lu can easily deduce the ins and outs of the incident, and he persists consistently. And honesty, but the shock at the end of the show I was looking forward to was far less than the first season, so don't look forward to watching the show; fortunately, when Molly's mother and her father exchanged goodnight, I still had a feeling in my heart. move. It doesn't matter who Camus is, he must be stupid without a six-year-old daughter, and there is no one in his heart, so life is absurd. Characters who are too honest and good people have not been very popular in recent years. After all, they are too far away from us mortals with all kinds of shortcomings, but throughout the two seasons of "Frozen", people love and like Molly, her father and His family, it can be seen how much Minnesota needs these lovely people.

Especially love the handling of episodes 7 and 8! The crew is simply amazing, and it's so enjoyable to watch. The two episodes are actually carried out at the same time, complementing each other's blank parts, and they are particularly dark and humorous. The character transitions—Peggy and Dodd—and the sleight of hand in Peggy's hallucinations and the play-within-a-scenario are neatly handled and are my favorite parts of the show. In the ninth episode, the foreign voice explanation is innovative, and the effect is different. It also comes with Peanut English voice. Although the acting is in a hurry, I was very happy when I heard Peanut's familiar voice.

This story, which is advertised as "true" in every episode, is full of absurdity. When I watched the first season, I foolishly believed a few episodes, until the plot became more and more absurd in the middle, and I doubted, is this really a true story? ! are you kidding me? Really amused, speechless. At the beginning of the second season, there was a flying saucer, which directly challenged the "real" description of the title. Ridiculous and dark humor everywhere, but Frozen is more real than many logical, well-ordered dramas. Life is often more absurd than stories (it's already a rotten quote, so everyone can see it more and more), when we watch dramas, we have God's perspective, and we know all the reasons and development of things. Wife is worse - she dies without knowing the whole story, even half the truth; back in reality, we're probably more stupid than Peggy when we make mistakes, and probably no better than Peggy's butcher husband Dealing with it more neatly, or more persistently than the two of them; all kinds of absurdities, constant coincidences, uncontrollable developments, all kinds of human weaknesses and flaws, and the unease of social unrest, Fang is the title "true" " basis.

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Extended Reading

Waiting for Dutch quotes

  • Lou Solverson: You feel okay?

    Betsy Solverson: Compared to what? Love Canal?

  • Lou Solverson: You okay gettin' her to bed?

    Betsy Solverson: Yeah. She's six. Not, you know, Pol Pot.