The first "Breaking Bad"
Starring: Brian Cranston, Aaron Paul, Anna Gon, Dean Norris, Betsy Brandt
The success of Breaking Bad is closely related to the characterization. The protagonist of the play, White, is a common mid-life crisis character in film and television works, and he faces the dual pressures of family and career. After getting deeper and deeper on the road to drug production, "fighting for the family" has become a plausible cover. The depth of the characters has also been excavated again and again in this twists and turns of the inner drama. White is both a father who worries about the future of his family and a weak person who has strayed into the drug trafficking industry, but then becomes more and more fierce, and finally returns to being an ordinary person again.

The Second Song of Ice and Fire
Starring: Kit Harrington, Emilia Clark, Pete Dinraki, Lina Heidi, Maisie Williams, Sean Bin, Nicola Coster-Waldau, Sophie Turner
With the high posture of "creating miracles", it broke the "curse" of American dramas that are difficult to succeed in magic dramas, subverted the creative level of all Hollywood magic films in one fell swoop, and became an insurmountable peak in the magic film and television industry. It gives actors, directors and screenwriters unlimited possibilities for creativity, and with its infinite and orderly creative space, it includes thousands of characters with full images, grotesque and unique and imaginative customs, and its space is complete, the details are rich, and the narrative is arbitrary.
Part III Westworld
Starring: Evan Rachel Wood, Anthony Hopkins, Ed Harris, Jimmy Simpson, Sids Babbitt Cornudson
Westworld is HBO's new show in 2016 that has the potential to become a national concern. Full of intrigue and bizarre futuristic plots, the show builds its own unique mastery by asking questions that are highly relevant to our current exploration of robotics engineering and artificial intelligence. At the same time, the series maintains the fantasy elements of late 17th-century American Western society, and also allows the audience to confront their own sympathy and potential cruelty.
The Fourth "Bankruptcy Sisters"
Starring: Kate Daylins, Beth Beaugh, Garrett Morris, Jonathan Ketter, Matthew Moi, Jennifer Kurić
This small-budget, small-story (only 20 minutes per episode), small-format (you can only see four or five tables in a restaurant) is full of heavy-flavored jokes and rough New York's "Lower East Side" life texture, like a spicy Mexican dish, changing the taste of audiences who are tired of politics, criminal investigation, and historical themes.
The Fifth "Company of Brothers"
Starring: Demien Lewis, Michael Savva, Dexter Fletcher, Colin Hanks, Iron Bailey, Tom Hardy, Peter Omela, Jimmy Bambo
The Second World War was drawing to a close, and at the same time it was at its worst. Germany was defeated by the Nazis, the Allies decided to open a second battlefield in Europe, and Normandy in northern France became the key point of the new situation. On June 6, 1944, Company E of the 506th Regiment of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division was ordered to parachute into this highly gun-fired beach. Company E is made up of a group of enthusiastic and patriotic young people, and the harsh training has made them the elite and backbone of the US military. Under the command of Lieutenant Winston, the warriors overcame various disadvantages and completed the landing battle with distinction. After this, the high-intensity fighting began until they conquered Hitler's last bastion, the base camp in Berchtesgaden. Brotherhood is an ode and requiem belonging to ordinary warriors.
Sixth Green Arrow
Starring: Stephen Amer, Katie Cassidy, Vera Holland, David Ramsey, Colton Haynes, John Barloman
Every episode of Green Arrow will see Green Arrow kill the villain in his eyes. Compared with similar superhero-themed film and television dramas, there are obviously many more rebel characters killed in Green Arrow. However, it is this kind of setting that deviates from mainstream values that makes the audience feel different and wins a lot of praise for it. Green Arrow Season 1 doesn't hesitate to unleash a variety of plot flashpoints and a variety of unexpected story divergences. First fully arousing the audience's interest in the background of the characters and the development of the story, and then solving the mystery step by step, is undoubtedly a wonderful way to deal with it, which makes people addicted.