Last night's episode (4th) was by far the best episode to my liking.
One of the most powerful weapons for mainstream TV series to retain audiences: the golden sentence, this episode began to appear intensively.
The old Israeli Kleiman started:
“They dress like bankers, they speak a dozen languages, they eat in the best restaurants, they stay in the best hotels, but underneath all that sophistication is an open grave in the Mexican desert with 50-headless corpses inside.” (They wear People look like dogs, ostensibly bankers, speak a dozen languages, eat in the most exclusive restaurants, sleep in the most luxurious hotels, but beneath all these civilizations are the tombs of the Mexican desert, with headless corpses littered everywhere. .)
Then the heroin smuggling on the India-Pakistan border sounds like a highly technical activity. You find out that there is actually a tin pipe between the barbed wire on both sides of the border, and strings of things tied like sausages are passed from the tin pipe. Pakistan to India.
Then there is the metaphor - although it's all a routine, isn't watching a popular drama just take the initiative to put it on - the sausage is put into the interlayer of the washing machine, which is the home appliance product of the foundry, and it can be packed directly into the container. If you don't choose other home appliances, don't you value the laundering function of the washing machine?
This is just the prologue, the highlight of this episode is not here.
At that IT guy we fired!
that fired IT guy, with a haggard complexion, a bit of Herzog's Klaus Kinski style.
"Fortunately for you that I know as much about financial fraud as you know about computer security."
The look of admiration the handsome financial guy looked at the sloppy hacker was exactly the same as the look in the eyes of the gang boss in Mumbai when he looked at the hacker he was holding in his hands.
There is no difference between high-end and low-end, so you can't help but smile. London and India, the light of justice and the darkness of evil have finally united, as well as the cooperation of Israel and the peripheral support of Mexico, with only one purpose: to kill the big bad guy in Moscow.
As "that IT guy" continued to reveal, we realized that, really, in this world, maybe for what Alex did, maybe he was really innocent. What the IT guys can do, others can't think of it, comfort him "you will be guilty of this." Someone he knew turned off the airport runway lights before the plane landed, and hacked the camera in the baby room, just to watch the mother breastfeed...
They spend 20 hours a day online, "we work harder than bankers." he said. "Earn the same amount?" This was Alex's concern.
Hehe, "we have more fun." - You don't understand the world of hackers.
The horror is right here, we have more fun. Gangsters, politicians, and businessmen still have goals, and there are places that can be restrained, either for profit or in name; but these new human beings are more capable than you, and can sneak into the computers and Internet technologies that you are now relying on to do great things. In any aspect of the game, the key is that people only want to have fun. This is the realm of no desire, and in theory, it is invincible.
"Aren't you lonely hiding behind the screen?" The financial dude can't imagine life without a lavish champagne party?
"I have more friends than you"
"Did you meet?"
"Why meet?" is a phrase I've heard the most in years, from my husband. Seeing this, we both burst into laughter at the same time.
No need to meet, that IT guy found him a Bengaluru genius who managed to intercept the Russian heroin container.
When everything was discovered by his girlfriend, and he couldn't escape, Alex threw out the same routine that Mike used to fool Kay:
"I'll come clean." Alex said.
"The family will be legitimate in 5 years." Mike said.
The most ironic golden sentence comes from his girlfriend teaching him a lesson to promote the moral justice of capitalism. How many people on this planet really believe in this illusion?
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