We have to speculate exactly on the intention of the person who wrote the question rather than the intention of the original author. Here, we need to understand what the director brings, not the idea of the screenwriter behind it.
First of all, it reflects the life of the grassroots in the United States. In a frontier town in Minnesota, it is similar to the existence of the Chinese countryside. There lives a group of people with a small life circle, and some things happen around them. In any case, the cowardly husband, the fat girl policeman, the adventure businessman, and the mysterious killer constitute a wolf disguised as a sheep to catch sheep in the sheepfold. Showing his tail, he didn't want to play anymore, and surrendered.
I don’t know if this reflects the background of the entire American society. Some people are persecuted, and a group of righteous people stand up to resist society. It is very appropriate but it is useless. The authorities ignore some important details in order to maintain the status quo. Style heroes stand up and change the status quo, and Prism Gate is just that. But I don't know if anyone has come forward to say something useful now, and I don't have any expectations.
As for the second season, watch it when you have time.
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