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Sometimes obsession is a really scary thing.
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Sometimes because something really changes a person.
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I think sometimes beliefs can make a big difference to a person.
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Personally, I think it should be not very harmonious with other people.
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Joss Whedon didn't leave Ward with a way to clear his name.
This is not allowed to be whitewashed.
Secondly, in the third episode after Ward's blackening, Skye finally discovered his true face, and Ward basically blatantly hijacked Skye.
Here, Joss Whedon is very well handled.
His twisted childhood affected him all his life, Garrett saved him and plunged him into another abyss, he took advantage of Ward's misfortune to make him a more cruel person while resisting, a ** who could be used by him. I was actually frightened when Ward killed his brother, and he smiled and coaxed his brother to kill him and disguise it perfectly as an accident. But this does not mean that he has drawn a line with the past and written everything off.
It's not about settling accounts, it's about getting entangled with the past and becoming someone like his brother who hurt him.
But this man was not completely ruthless and ruthless at that time, and his intolerance, pity and tenderness still shone faintly. He was asked to shoot the dog, which he didn't, and he was asked to kill the science baby, and he didn't. He was conflicted, struggling, and suffering.
But Garrett didn't care, S.H.I.E.L.D. didn't understand. No one believed in him anymore, not even his beloved Skye. (And shoot him four times.)
Many people are discussing whether he can still wash white, whether he will be with Skye, white can't be white, **33 hangs, I feel like he's going to black again. Barbie was right, he kept making excuses for himself, trying to get himself knotted and comforted with revenge, and from the moment he decided to kill the first person to push open the door, I was completely disappointed in the character, and all he had left was torture, and his pathetic love.
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He's a hidden villain.
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In "S.H.I.E.L.D.**", Ward hides deeply, and everyone has selfish intentions, so he betrays S.H.I.E.L.D.
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Because the director said it, it had to be done.
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In real life, there are many such people.
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The whole plot needs to be reversed.
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I think that's how you can attract the audience!
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I've always felt that this person is mysterious.
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Ward is hiding so much. Everyone has their own selfish intentions. It's as simple as that.
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No. Grant Ward, a virtual organization of Marvel Inc., is a Level 7 S.H.I.E.L.D.**, whose real identity is Garrett (Hydra) who broke into S.H.I.E.L.D.'s spy, and betrayed Philip Coulson's action team in "S.H.I.E.L.D.**". After Garrett's death, he broke away from Hydra.
Grant Ward (Grant Ward) is a supervillain under Marvel Comics, a level 7 of S.H.I.E.L.D., and his real identity is the adopted son of John Garrett, a Hydra spy and Hydra**. Defected to Coulson's action team in S.H.I.E.L.D.**, and after Garrett's death, reorganized Hydra.
Grant Ward is a Level 7** of S.H.I.E.L.D., previously discovered by John Garrett of Level 8**, and has been trained to become an expert killer. Because Garrett is a Hydra spy, Ward also joins Hydra. In "S.H.I.E.L.D. Season 1", he is the covert operations expert in the group, but he is not good at teamwork and communication with the group members, and his skills in handling tasks are slightly lacking due to his personality.
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can't be said to be bad, the next episode trailer of the latest update mentioned that he had to choose, don't forget that his so is Garrett, according to Marvel's style, he should still be in the camp of justice.
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The writers on TVGUIDE say that he is bad, and that the previous evaluation of him by Berserker Staff and Lorelei is foreshadowing.
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Probably not, probably on purpose.
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Grant Ward (Grant Ward) is a supervillain under Marvel Comics, a level 7 of S.H.I.E.L.D., and his real identity is the adopted son of John Garrett, a Hydra spy and Hydra**. Defected to Coulson's operation team in "S.H.I.E.L.D.**", and after Garrett's death, reorganized Hydra, but there are signs of whitewashing in the fourth season of the TV series.
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No. Grant Ward, a virtual organization of Marvel Inc., is a Level 7 S.H.I.E.L.D.**, whose real identity is Garrett (Hydra) who broke into S.H.I.E.L.D.'s spy, and betrayed Philip Coulson's action team in "S.H.I.E.L.D.**". After Garrett's death, he broke away from Hydra.
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In S.H.I.E.L.D.**, Ward was eventually killed by Coulson, who was infected by the Hive and became its host.
Grant Ward is a supervillain under the American Marvel Comics and a seventh-level S.H.I.E.L.D. level. His true identity is that of a Hydra spy, the adopted son of Hydra Quickhan Garrett.
In S.H.I.E.L.D.**, Grant Ward betrayed Coulson's operation team, and after Garrett's death, reorganized Hydra.
In "S.H.I.E.L.D.**", Ward was discovered by the eighth-level **John Garrett, and after one-handed training, he became an expert-level killer, because Garret** was a Hydra spy, so Ward** also joined Hydra**.
In S.H.I.E.L.D. Season 1, Ward is the covert operations expert in the group, not good at teamwork, and doesn't like to communicate with people.
In addition, "S.H.I.E.L.D.**" is a live-action sci-fi action series produced by Marvel TV, a feast of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, directed by "The Avengers" director Joe Round Whedon Navigator, Joss Whedon and his younger brother Jade Whedon and sister-in-law Maurisa Tancharoen participated in the script writing.
This one is not very clear, and I am not too impressed with this movie.
There is straw in the paddy that comes out of the World harvester, which is not clean because the grass is tangled at the upper end of the conveying trough. >>>More