It was only after reading the introduction that I decided to enter the pit, but it is a bit regrettable that the first episode ended, and I feel that there is a problem with the logic of the plot.
Color, filming, editing, acting, there is no problem. A full-scale display of a car accident, the foreshadowing of each clue is perfectly buried, and it must be very lively behind. But I still feel that there is a logical problem, mainly because the judge's last simple and rude operation of concealing criminal evidence is very unprofessional. The second is that the judge's position was changed just because the father of the deceased was a gang leader, and it would be miserable for his son to surrender himself. This is a bit thin.
In the first episode, the judges are set up as excellent professionals who are stable, wise, thoughtful and energetic. Once this kind of person decides to hide the evidence of the crime for his son, he can help his son get rid of the crime. Then all operations will be calm, professional and rigorous. For example, he will first ask his son all the details of the whole process of the incident, and then formulate in detail the handling methods and coping strategies for all hidden problems, including making false testimony. It is a pity that the operation of the judge in the play is basically no different from that of an ordinary person. Just throw away the blood clothes, wipe the blood in the car, and then watch the opera with my son as if nothing happened. This simple operation makes every audience understand that the doom of the judge and his son is coming, not to mention that the opponent is the biggest gang leader.
The second is that it is too easy for judges to change their positions. He has defended the law all his life, no matter whether the other party is a gang leader or not, it is illegal for his son to hit and run. The law was defeated in an instant, which also made it difficult to sympathize with what happened to the judge in the future. The judge is a criminal.
In this way, the subsequent plot conflicts also feel difficult to be exciting and exciting. The best comparison is "Breaking Bad". In order to turn a middle school teacher into a Breaking Bad, the plot has made a lot of preparations, so that in the end, Breaking Bad is desperate, and the audience still has faint sympathy.
This first episode is over and I don't want to sympathize with the judge because it's self-inflicted and unprofessional. Countless witnesses, the vehicle involved in the accident, recorded phone calls, asthma sprays, and bloody clothes taken by dogs are all evidence to convict the judge and his son, not to mention that a professional gangster has also targeted their father and son.
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