Now is 2020, look after the epidemic. I just wanted to watch it for fun, but I was still attracted. Although I knew that it was like a zombie, I still wanted to watch it.
Reason one, it's not a mindless drama, you can't guess what the villain is going to do. The second reason is that the plot narrated by multi-line characters will not have that kind of protagonist feeling, which distracts the focus. The third reason is that it has a complete story to advance, multiple protagonists have been working hard, and the protagonists have developed comprehensively, but there is no particularly reasonable explanation.
Disadvantage 1 The core is very swinging between belief and science, resulting in a very unconventional or even a bit crude ending of the characters. Second, the clues and details are not connected together. The most critical book, the Heart of the Fallen, has very few things found. It really depends on the whole process. The third ending was handled sloppily, the father and son sacrificed for righteousness, Quinlan completed his mission, and there were lovers together, especially the last paragraph in a new tone that the sun came out again, and the days changed for the better. Who are the people who sacrificed before?
The character creation is not very clear. The only ones I can remember after watching it for an hour are Quinlan, Brother Gus and Zach the bear, and the others can't stand out. Quinlan's thoughts and actions are different from ordinary people, so remember him. Brother Gus is very filial and has his own style of play. You can also remember that Zach's bear child psychology is impressive. But the protagonists of the first to fourth seasons, they have nothing to remember, they feel that the plot is not driven by them, and they all follow the villain.
The most unforgettable scenes are those scenes of Abraham and Thomas in the concentration camp, which have that flavor but have no practical effect. It's just a face-to-face meeting with each other. There is no deeper understanding and no hatred, so that every time Thomas calls A230385, the feelings that should be there are not in place.
There are also Fate's grandfather and Thomas who met in the concentration camp, which obviously can lay a lot of foreshadowing, why Fate will be Abraham's last successor, or some others, and finally just let go of the shadow brought by his father. The frame feels very big, covering three generations of conspiracy, but the story isn't that brilliant.
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