#Full-text spoiler reminder#
Recently, I accidentally opened this drama. It was pushed by a certain subtitle group. I watched the synopsis: After her husband was hit by a car late at night, the hardcore heroine Jen was looking for the driver who caused the accident while she was dealing with the mess of her life and work. She was participating in a sharing. During the meeting, she met another woman, Judy. After the friendship between the two of them heated up, Judy moved into Jen's house, faced the scars of the two and took care of their two underage sons. It sounds clichéd healing literature, but the screenwriter just told it all at the end of the first episode. Judy was the murderer who killed Jen's husband. She approached Jen to compensate. The screenwriter is very good at it. At the end of each episode, he loses his baggage. Judy's boyfriend Steve is also an accomplice, Jen's husband cheated on the mistress and his wife has passed away and so on. The rhythm is very fast and there are many conflicts. Each episode is 30 minutes and can be chased in one breath. The current series is relatively unpopular, but I still feel that it is a masterpiece not to be missed.
The first female in the play, Jen, is a hard-core strong woman who has a bad temper, and she will come back or shoot if she can't bear it. The original family was also her husband who was earning money to take care of the family. Now that her husband suddenly passed away, almost all middle-aged crises appeared on her: she had breast cancer genes and had to remove her breasts in advance, her husband could not accept cheating, her two sons had different problems, the relationship between mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, and the economic crisis. The relationship between the two heroines in the front is more harmonious, and the sense of betrayal in the back is stronger.
The second girl, Judy, is a sensitive and delicate literary youth. She previously worked part-time in a nursing home. She had a miscarriage for 5 times with her handsome boyfriend. The relationship between the two was also in crisis. After the accident, I have been struggling internally, so I approached the hostess in order to make up for her, chatted with her until she fell asleep, took care of the children and so on. I have always felt guilty for running away from the accident, and have been disconnected from her boyfriend and new date. Until the end, I confessed myself.
In the adult's life, there is really no easy mode except getting fat. There are too many things to hold, and every second will be exhausted and heartbroken. There is no answer to the topic, and the pain cannot be avoided. You can only muster the courage to face everything as much as possible, heal yourself, and solve yourself is the right answer.
Recently, Netflix released a variety of scripts in one breath, such as the previous warm zombie film "True Love Is Not Dead" (unfortunately it was cut after the third season), which are all novels with novel settings and fast-paced dramas. American and Japanese dramas have always been fast-paced, but they tend to be unfinished and unfinished. "Insensitive" has now been renewed for the second season, but in terms of the current number of appearances and the structure of the story, it is likely to stay in the second or third season (if any), and watch it and cherish it.
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