Season 1 of Genius is based on Walter Isaacson's Einstein. I have to say that this show is indeed a bit "chaotic" and uses two timelines, but in my opinion, the second timeline can also be regarded as Einstein's memories of his life on the first timeline. "What is time?" In this play, it's not just a physics problem, it's a series of two timelines, and the two timelines are finally meeting. Although the show is called "Genius", most of Einstein's achievements have been touched in a single stroke. It does not praise Einstein's greatness, but prefers to tell that Einstein is outside his genius halo. his life, including his love life, academic pursuits, and the sophistication he experienced. There is no doubt that the protagonist in the play is one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century and even mankind so far - Albert Einstein. He was born in Germany, the day when his unrestrained imagination met a dogmatic and rigid way of education. When his family moved to Italy, he simply dropped out of school and went to study in relatively free Switzerland. In Switzerland, he renounced his German citizenship and became a citizen of the world. He met a lover, got married and had children, published papers, and gradually became famous. Because of the favorable job opportunities and the attraction of love, ten years after publishing his famous paper, he returned to Berlin, the city where he was born and grew up, but because of his Jewish identity, the Nazis are pressing step by step , he ran away again. He ended up in the United States, where he accepted a professorship at Princeton, but was unwilling to help research the atomic bomb. In his later years, he has long regarded fame and fortune as something outside his body, but he still cannot escape the various evaluations of the world. Einstein is indeed a scumbag when it comes to love. In Switzerland, 16-year-old Einstein met his first love, 18-year-old Marie. When Einstein entered the university, Mary was deeply in love with Einstein, but Einstein's first letter to Mary after entering the university was to cut off the relationship. Einstein's emotional inhumanity didn't end there, but no doubt Mileva, who was about to fall in love with Einstein, was unaware of it. Mileva was the only person in college who was smarter than Einstein, but when the two got married, Mileva devoted herself to helping Einstein complete his academic pursuits. But in my opinion, although Einstein tried his best to argue that Mileva was his favorite person, he actually just regarded Mileva as a tool in his pursuit of academics. Mileva could have become a genius like Einstein, but in her love life with Einstein, she was forced to become a hysterical ordinary person who was almost crazy. In my opinion Mileva is the most pathetic person in the whole show. Later, Einstein fell in love with his cousin, Elsa. Rather than being in love, it is better to say that Einstein took a fancy to Elsa's background and connections. After Elsa's death, the beautiful spy Margaret (other sources say her name is Konykova) appeared in the old Einstein's life. She was from the Soviet Union, young and beautiful, and like a stimulant in his lonely moments. And her purpose, whether it is the secret of atomic bomb research, or whether there is real admiration and love in the falsehood, we have no way of knowing. The lives of great men are not destined to be peaceful. Einstein never lacked stumbling blocks along the way. One of the most typical is Philip Lerner. Lerner was an extreme man who would not allow anyone to challenge his authority, just because Einstein openly confronted him in college, he would do anything to suppress Einstein, even advocating that The Theory of Relativity was an outright hoax. In the end, he pledged allegiance to Hitler. Lerner is indeed a scientist, but he cannot be said to be a great scientist. His academic achievements are beyond reproach, but in reality he suppressed his colleagues and even encouraged all German scientists to be loyal to Hitler, and suggested that Hitler develop an atomic bomb, which was destined to prevent it from being born to future generations. 's approval. Finally, I can sum up the whole play and Einstein himself in just four words - no one is perfect. Later, Einstein fell in love with his cousin, Elsa. Rather than being in love, it is better to say that Einstein took a fancy to Elsa's background and connections. After Elsa's death, the beautiful spy Margaret (other sources say her name is Konykova) appeared in the old Einstein's life. She was from the Soviet Union, young and beautiful, and like a stimulant in his lonely moments. And her purpose, whether it is the secret of atomic bomb research, or whether there is real admiration and love in the falsehood, we have no way of knowing. The lives of great men are not destined to be peaceful. Einstein never lacked stumbling blocks along the way. One of the most typical is Philip Lerner. Lerner was an extreme man who would not allow anyone to challenge his authority, just because Einstein openly confronted him in college, he would do anything to suppress Einstein, even advocating that The Theory of Relativity was an outright hoax. In the end, he pledged allegiance to Hitler. Lerner is indeed a scientist, but he cannot be said to be a great scientist. His academic achievements are beyond reproach, but in reality he suppressed his colleagues and even encouraged all German scientists to be loyal to Hitler, and suggested that Hitler develop an atomic bomb, which was destined to prevent it from being born to future generations. 's approval. Finally, I can sum up the whole play and Einstein himself in just four words - no one is perfect. Later, Einstein fell in love with his cousin, Elsa. Rather than being in love, it is better to say that Einstein took a fancy to Elsa's background and connections. After Elsa's death, the beautiful spy Margaret (other sources say her name is Konykova) appeared in the old Einstein's life. She was from the Soviet Union, young and beautiful, and like a stimulant in his lonely moments. And her purpose, whether it is the secret of atomic bomb research, or whether there is real admiration and love in the falsehood, we have no way of knowing. The lives of great men are not destined to be peaceful. Einstein never lacked stumbling blocks along the way. One of the most typical is Philip Lerner. Lerner was an extreme man who would not allow anyone to challenge his authority, just because Einstein openly confronted him in college, he would do anything to suppress Einstein, even advocating that The Theory of Relativity was an outright hoax. In the end, he pledged allegiance to Hitler. Lerner is indeed a scientist, but he cannot be said to be a great scientist. His academic achievements are beyond reproach, but in reality he suppressed his colleagues and even encouraged all German scientists to be loyal to Hitler, and suggested that Hitler develop an atomic bomb, which was destined to prevent it from being born to future generations. 's approval. Finally, I can sum up the whole play and Einstein himself in just four words - no one is perfect.
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