just watched season 3

Caterina 2022-10-16 10:07:19

It's an old film from 1995, but the American drama screenwriters in it are still very pure! I believe many people are familiar with the basic model of American dramas, so I won't repeat it here.
To be honest, I'm used to watching the procrastination of American dramas in recent years, and I still like JAG's films with simplified characters, refined stories, and no classified lenses.
The plot may be a little less innovative by current standards, but it was still quite outstanding in 1995! There are also a large number of fighter jets, guns and aircraft carriers, involving a lot of military knowledge and the history of American wars (mainly the Vietnam War and the like), which is quite interesting to see.
Most importantly, language! It is undeniable that the language inside is quite standardized, and there are no swear words even in the war scene (it's really not easy~ Sahua~~~~)
There was one little episode that struck me in particular. I still remember the lieutenant's generosity of speech at the military court (a typical American lyric speech, as you all know) explaining why he had to disobey orders and risk the lives of innocent people to save his subordinates. . After listening to it, I was a little touched, but I was not moved (probably because I heard too much of this kind of stuff), but I didn't expect that at the end, when the lawyer called for the black female primary school teacher who had just lost a child, the lawyer asked her: Do you blame for him for your son's death? She said: Yes. After a pause, when the lawyer signaled to the judge that the question was over, she suddenly said and I blame him and I blame you, you and you, all of you, Suddenly, I was surprised. She cried bitterly and said, I blame you because you stand by and do nothing. so rich, you send us food and sholves, but you don't protect us. Even if your own people are killed, you do nothing. finally this one, this one sends in soldiers to fight and now you want to punish him. I don't understand your country. Do you?
At that time, looking at the tearful black woman, I was wonderfully moved.
Afterwards, the chief told the lawyer's colleagues that he made the mistake of a first-year student lawyer by putting a witness on the stand without knowing the testimony of the witness, leaving himself in a passive state. But a colleague said he knew. It was also this time that the chief did not accuse him of "leaving water".

I like to watch the cases here, because there is no compensation, no winning rate, and some are just worthy of conscience.

If you have to set a style for this show, it feels a bit like a prototype version of house+boston legal+criminal minds.
Oh oh oh, to add: The male and female protagonists in it are still as handsome and beautiful as always~ The uniform will never be bound by the times. It's just that occasionally those big bricks make me feel awkward.

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Extended Reading

JAG quotes

  • Narrator: Following in his father's footsteps as a Naval aviator, Lieutenant Commander Harmon Rabb Jr. suffered a crash while landing his Tomcat on a storm-tossed carrier at sea. Diagnosed with night blindness, Harm transferred to the Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps, which investigates, defends and prosecutes the law of the sea. There, with fellow JAG lawyer Major Sarah MacKenzie, he now fights in and out of the courtroom with the same daring and tenacity that made him a top gun in the air.