starts with one terrorist attack and ends with another terrorist attack, and ends with
a girl's departure from home It starts and ends with the return of a young girl,
starts with the rise of a sect and ends with the rise of a race. It
can be classified into countless dramas, but neither is a sci-fi drama that fails to please either, or it is more suitable to call it an overhead historical drama. ...
Unfortunately, the first 8 episodes have too many clues, slow pace, dull,
awkward Zoe, nervous mother, and naughty female terrorist. The three characters have singular development and sudden changes, resulting in the unpleasant main female. The characters, in
contrast, the main male characters seem to bear the humiliation and bear the burden of humiliation, steady and steady, naturally believable,
but the last 10 episodes, especially the last two episodes after the cut, are quite good. It's a pity,
it's a pity, I saw the last episode Bill Ada When Ma was born and erected the Five Cylons Memorial Sculpture, it felt like a world away. It made me feel that
the stigma of Zoe terrorists could not be cleared up until the end, just like the ubiquitous life regrets and history in the real world mystery.
Caprica, like Galactica, never preached, they just narrate a "history",
they describe the historical context in which a sect arose and a "god" was identified.
The uniqueness and excellence of Caprica in science fiction is that although it describes a sci-fi scene similar to cyberspace and AI such as The Matrix Artificial Intelligence,
it is the first time that it replaces cyberspace enough to replace the real world Human AI artificial race, the rise process of the two is really clear,
although the two processes are too dramatic and deeply entangled with a family of three, it seems that chance exceeds historical inevitability, a bit reluctant,
but still bold The two processes are explained completely.
Just waiting for another prequel, Blood and Chrome.
View more about Caprica reviews