tentative

Berenice 2022-03-30 09:01:12

S2E4

As soon as Gallery died, it seemed that everything he had experienced was well concealed. His gestures reveal the tranquility before the storm. The embarrassing and friendly first-person perspective is substituted into the lives of the officials. The green master and the red master desperately want to repair their relationship, but it is too late. The end of a lie is an endless abyss. Blue, which has never been quoted in large numbers, emerged as a disruptor of order, breaking the daily routine of red and green. It's ridiculous that the gas mask that was once used to make money is now a weapon to block its own odor. Thinking about it carefully, where did the crack start, it seems to be diagnosed with cancer, it seems to be starting to manufacture drugs, and it seems to be killing the first person. The butterfly effect is out of control.

blue
House seemingly endless rain
under the fence
Conflict intensifies, it must be a turning point
dimensionality reduction

S2E5

At present, Hank is a good person, and there is nothing wrong with him. However, I always feel that there are some things that have not been mentioned. People cannot only be positive, and there is a risk of blackening.

Walter is more of an idealist than a perfectionist. Always think about achieving the perfect situation. A chemist, who has also been "imprisoned" in an ivory tower for too long, is not as happy and straightforward as anyone around him, thinks more, does less, talks around corners, thinks about perfect results, and is unwilling to take risks or not. May you have any elements in yourself that do not belong to you, but you do not want to be contaminated with dust but have fallen into the quagmire.

S2E6

Out of pride or hatred, or a sense of crisis exposed by lies, Walter and Gretchen break up. Out of nowhere, the crisis is full of crises, retaining the last trace of conscience and inexplicable persistence. A high-flying poisoner said, a crime without victims.

S2E8

The bigger the business, the bigger the team, and the bigger the team, the bigger the risk.

The last two episodes are excessive episodes, and there is no obvious turning point and end, but patiently paving the way with details.

The high score of the series makes people have a reliable object, and every scene that seems meaningless becomes infinitely charming because of the high score and the blessing of the cause and effect.

View more about Seven Thirty-Seven reviews

Extended Reading

Seven Thirty-Seven quotes

  • Hank Schrader: Yeah, I recognize these two knobjobs. Known associates of a psychotic piece of shit named Tuco Salamanca.

    Steven Gomez: Guess he got tired of associating.

  • Steven Gomez: APD sent this over. This was about eight or ten days ago. You know Southwest Aniline, right?

    Hank Schrader: Yeah, off the 25? The place smells like feet.

    Steven Gomez: This is them. Check this out.

    Hank Schrader: [watching the surveillance tape] Holy shit. What was that?

    Steven Gomez: Thermite. So they tell me. Burns about 5,000 degrees. Kind of stuff you see on a James Bond movie.

    Hank Schrader: Nice. Guys who know their trade.

    [watching the perps carrying a barrel]

    Hank Schrader: Ah, wait. I take that back.

    [laughing]

    Hank Schrader: What, they didn't think about stealing a hand truck? Hey, try rolling it, morons. It's a barrel. It rolls. Jesus. So, what'd they get?

    Steven Gomez: Methylamine, 30 gallons.

    Hank Schrader: P2P? They're cooking old-school biker meth. Who the hell still does that?

    Steven Gomez: All the old timers I know are either dead or in prison.

    Hank Schrader: Pesudo's in short supply, so these two make do by changing the formula. That and the thermite, I'd say these two know their chemistry.

    Steven Gomez: But ranking them as burglars?

    Hank Schrader: [laughing again] Shit. I wouldn't trust these two to break into the Special Olympics. They got book learning but no street skills.

    Steven Gomez: Maybe they're college kids. Chem students trying to make a big score.

    Hank Schrader: Yeah, maybe. I tell you, 30 gallons of precursor... that big a score, they're gonna wind up stepping on some toes. I tell you what, they better pray it's us who catches up to 'em and not those boys from Juarez.