Ben Whishaw is really good at acting. He is sympathetic when he plays a good man, and his teeth are gnashing when he plays a bad ball. He is indeed suitable for this kind of sensitive, delicate, thoughtful, naughty, and neurotic roles. Hugh Grant was too old to recognize, and it wasn't until the end of the second episode that I realized at the beginning of the first episode - 1962 that he was meant to be a young statesman rather than an accomplished old man.
The ending of the unsuccessful attempt to kill the little bastard was regrettable, and he sighed, and directly caused the villain to bite Thorpe in the public. Thorpe is absurd, laissez-faire, and unscrupulous, but anyone in the shadow of years of blackmail, intimidation, and the resulting life-destroying horror from villains can't blame him for intuitively wanting to remove hidden dangers. Thorpe did not lose Scott when the two were together. When the two were coupled, it was basically your love, but when Scott broke out, he went to the Disciplinary Committee to report it. Shock! Afterwards, whenever he encountered difficulties, he would put the rope around Thorpe's neck, and stab his relatives directly over and over again, without any measure or buffer. This kind of behavior that violates the rules of public goodness and the rules of small circles is enough to make people have great malice towards this femininous appearance, despicable heart, and quick thinking, so the judge said the negative evaluation is really happy, he is a Fraudster villain parasite!
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