Episode 4 Label [clay is simply a sort of vindicator-like disgusting, hurting others in order to achieve his own justice, eww, how good is he, and what is his position? Guilt feels that Hannah is manipulating others, manipulate, eye for eye, tooth for tooth. She is really a teenager (supplement: in the final analysis, she is still a teenager) The group portrait is also a group of mourning ghosts, forgiving herself with the pain of others] (…only about the fourth set)
Even I myself judge them from the highest angle, who am I, and whether I have ever been like them. (Supplement: Really the fourth episode is too bad and emotional)
Dividing line~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cutting line
I saw episode 8, episode 8 is the best episode I've seen so far
Episode 4 was really disgusting. I still don't understand the discrimination chain, no matter what Tyler does, sigh (I know how to correct my mistakes... I don't know how to judge this kind of thing and give up) the boundary between law and human feelings. Can anyone help me explain this chain of discrimination.
Episodes 5, 6, and 7 are of little significance, mainly to promote the plot, and to understand why Zach, Courtney, Marcus, and Ryan have gone too far? Deepened Hannah's image? How to evaluate these things, the straw that broke the camel, each one seems to be insignificant, but "accumulates and destroys the bones".
These things affect everyone deeply, whether it's Hannah who died, or anyone else who is burdened with this guilt.
Clay's image is full in the seventh and eighth episodes, and he gradually understands his behavior, guilt, repression, refusal to accept, and even self-loathing reflected. why me? follow up
He is led by a nerd - runaway freak - real person (don't know how to describe it)
Hannah's image also stood up, drama girl, sensitive, straightforward, and sometimes hesitant to speak. Much like us in adolescence.
What was the last straw that broke her, and why did she leave the straps behind.
PS really think about it Tyler is by far the most over-acting one.
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