When Pip became a gentleman, although he was happy to get rid of his country life, he could feel his fear of a new life in his eyes. He worked hard to learn the rules and requirements of Victorian England society. He didn't want the upper class around him to find out that he came from the country, and when his brother-in-law came to visit him, Pip was not surprised or happy. Pip pretended to be calm, but he was very flustered. He felt that his brother-in-law was dressed inappropriately. Ashamed, ashamed of one's own origin. The difference between this TV series and most film and television works is that even the protagonist will have human flaws. In ordinary film and television works, the protagonist's image is always brilliant and almost flawless. For example, in "Pride and Prejudice" Darcy, who is almost a model in everyone's heart, can be called a perfect person. And the character of Pip is not perfect, he also has the indifference to his family, the shame of having just arrived in the city of London and the kind of breakdown when he learns that he is funded by a fugitive, it reflects human nature real side. This is also a fiction that is both virtual and reflects reality at the same time. In the end, I think Pip's efforts to help the fugitive are also a perfect interpretation of the character of the protagonist Pip by the author Dickens.
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