I remember in the early old American police and bandit films, most of the protagonists were strong and powerful men. The invulnerability
is probably because this theme has been played badly by everyone.
In recent years, the detective line has become popular again. The earliest European and American detectives should be Sherlock Holmes. The success of the detective film lies in the fact that it scrambled a number of technology concept stocks. Combining the modern people's superstition of technology with the worship of heroes, it only misleads the audience to a large extent in the achievement of high ratings.
In the past 100 years, the identification and inspection technology of physical evidence has indeed been greatly improved, and many branches of forensic science have developed by leaps and bounds, but technology is still not the mainstream department in the American judicial system. Real, but far higher than reality. Thinking of the Simpson case in the United States, from the scene investigation, the extraction of evidence, and the inspection, the lawyers who were not hired by high salaries found a bunch of pigtails. The principle of material exchange certainly determines that what happened must leave corresponding traces, but how many times can the technicians seamlessly link the tiny physical evidence on the scene with the real situation of the case? As a film, CSI creates all kinds of evidence and links to complete the plot and finally finds the suspect, which is very pleasing. But in fact, attentive audiences can still find that there are too many coincidences, and many very reasonable case analysis. In fact, even the most sophisticated on-site investigators may not be able to find out before solving the case. Most cases The accumulation is the evidence that is pushed back and supplemented after the suspect confesses. Remember, the more complex the reasoning, the more highly specialized means of evidence, the less likely it will happen. Let's take an objective look at these court detectives.
View more about CSI: Crime Scene Investigation reviews