In the last episode of the second season, Rick chose to leave alone to surrender himself. Is this love? One of the most intelligent people in the universe has made so many amazing inventions and experienced countless thrilling adventures. Is it the most cliche love that moves us the most? Why must we pursue the stability of the earth and the "future of children" in the words of parents? Why not enjoy the feeling of a mini planet at the center of the universe? In the final analysis, Rick's family are ordinary people. They haven't seen the universe that Rick has seen, and haven't even seen the universe very much. Where does the universe view come from? To put it more vulgarly, if the three views are inconsistent with the four views, where can the happiness and stability of the people of the earth come from together? Just imagine that ordinary people are exposed to quantum physics for the first time. What kind of parallel universe and the fur of ten-dimensional space can subvert our world view. With Rick's IQ, can the universe seen by his thinking be the same as that of ordinary humans? Rather than love making Rick do it, he was lost, helpless, and disheartened. After all, we can choose our friends and opponents to a certain extent, but we cannot choose our family members. If there's a bit of dignity and our freedom of choice in the end, go to jail, it's nothing to us Ricks. After all, he's such a dick.
View more about
A Rickle in Time reviews