Free Download Person Of Interest

Free Download Person Of Interest

gillbai




Free Download Person Of Interest

http://urllio.com/r1wuv






















An ex-assassin and a wealthy programmer save lives via a surveillance AI that sends them the identities of civilians involved in impending crimes. However, the details of the crimes--including the civilians' roles--are left a mystery.
Wealthy genius software engineer, who generally goes by the name Harold Finch, is the mastermind behind the creation of an all-seeing machine. Finch and his front man Nathan Ingram devised the machine to sell to the US government, who are unaware of Finch working behind the scenes. The purpose of the machine is so that the government can spot acts leading to terrorism to prevent those terrorist acts from occurring. But what the government considers irrelevant in its use of the machine are acts leading to murder. As such, Finch, without the government's knowledge that he has a back door to the machine, wants to prevent those murders. The machine only provides the social security number of someone involved, Finch unaware if that person is the target or perpetrator. He enlists the help of an ex-CIA special operative who generally goes by the name John Reese to assist in his mission, Reese who is officially listed as dead. But as Reese in particular often uses non-legal means to achieve Finch's end goal, he is tracked by the authorities, who only know him as the man in the suit. They are also tracked by those who are thwarted by the pair in carrying out this mission, and by the few who know of the machine's existence and who have their own nefarious thoughts of what to do with the machine if they can get their hands on it.
This program has made me become a TV Lounge Lizard, I just cannot wait for the new episodes to come out and I enjoy reading up everything including comments about the show.<br/><br/>It combines Hi Tech and Clint Eastwood approach to situations that I find fascinating..... Whenever I say Fascinating I feel I have invaded Mr Spocks arena . Ha Ha.<br/><br/>As a viewer I don&#39;t really know how this collection of ideas and great actors who suit this show all came together so well, but the glue sticks well.<br/><br/>All I can say is I hope that the show keeps up the good work and I am waiting eagerly for up coming episodes.
So I don&#39;t have too many TV shows that I would say that I&#39;m hooked on. I had LOST while it was on the air, and that was enough for me. Since that show ended, I&#39;ve had a couple of shows that I&#39;ve paid attention to, but none have ever really replicated the intensity and addictiveness of LOST. In fact, in those years, there have been shows that I have thought might have the &quot;potential,&quot; but they all flopped and didn&#39;t get renewed. For this reason, I have a hard time when someone tells me a show is &quot;the new LOST&quot; or something to that effect. <br/><br/>The show that I&#39;m writing about is not it.<br/><br/>Person of Interest is a new CBS crime drama that started airing last week. I didn&#39;t know much about it, but I saw that it had received some good reviews. I did some research and found it had some promise.<br/><br/>First off, it was created by two men named Jonathan Nolan and JJ Abrams. If you do not know who these men are, let me explain. JJ Abrams is the man behind LOST. That should be enough, but if you weren&#39;t a fan of that show (gasp!), then he also directed the recent Star Trek movie as well as this summer&#39;s Super 8. The other man is Jonathon Nolan. His brother is Christopher Nolan, who directed the last two Batman movies and is working on the third. Christopher directed them, but Jonathan Nolan wrote the screenplays. And he wrote the screenplay for Person of Interest.<br/><br/>Secondly, I noticed the cast. As I mentioned, one of the principal characters is played by Michael Emerson. I am of the opinion that Michael Emerson is one of the greatest actors on television. Benjamin Linus was such a complex, mysterious character and Emerson&#39;s acting really brought a lot to the show. The main character, however, is played by Jim Caviezel. I&#39;ve liked this actor ever since he starred in 2002&#39;s The Count of Monte Cristo, but many people know him for playing Jesus in The Passion of the Christ. He&#39;s a phenomenal actor that is able to bring out the humanity in a character while at the same time portraying the raw nature of man. In other words, he can play a tough guy with a heart.<br/><br/>That being said, let&#39;s talk about the plot. The first thing that came to mind was &quot;Minority Report.&quot; Both that movie and this television show are about preventing homicides before they happen. However, as the episode progressed, I thought nothing of that movie, as while the premise is not an original idea, here it is presented in a way that does not seek to imitate. Whereas &quot;Minority Report&quot; was about a futuristic &quot;utopian&quot; society in which crime is prevented through precognition, &quot;Person of Interest&quot; is more realistic and less science fiction. It takes place in present day New York City, a city still living in paranoia after the attacks of 9/11. Without spoiling much of the pilot, the premise is based off the massive security and surveillance undertaken by the government, and what would happen if that system were able to identify potential murderers and murder victims before a situation occurred.<br/><br/>It&#39;s obviously inspired by several other films and television shows. However, it doesn&#39;t seem like it, and from the direction to the acting to the writing, it&#39;s clear that this is a show that wants to stand on its own. It&#39;s not trying to be the next LOST; it&#39;s trying to be a good show. And personally, I think it&#39;ll succeed. It has the action, it has the plot twists, it has the suspense, and all the other things we expect out of a show like this these days. But beyond that, it has a passion behind it—which is what I think drew so many people to LOST, as well as other shows like Firefly and Arrested Development—that this is something that the people behind it want to see succeed and to be good.

It is based on a screenplay developed by J. J. Abrams and Jonathan Nolan, which is inspired by movies like Enemy of the State, The Bourne Identity, and particularly Minority Report. The idea for the show came about long before Edward Snowden and Prism story came out. The show also contains the usual &quot;cop tv drama&quot; elements.It was revealed at the end of season two that Finch was injured in the ferry explosion that killed his friend Nathan Ingram. He has been seen in flashbacks to have spent time using a wheelchair for sometime afterwards, in 2010. It wasn&#39;t just his leg that was injured, his cervical vertebrae was affected and he has pins in his neck from spinal fusion surgery, as shown in an early season one episode. Finch limps and has trouble turning his neck. The Machine applies differently colored boxes in order to categorize the people it observes. Boxes can change as the Machine re-evaluates its assessment of the individuals it monitors.<br/><br/>White box: Individuals the Machine is currently monitoring, but who do not pose an immediate threat.<br/><br/>White box with red corners and crosshairs: Indicates imminent/ongoing violence by the indicated individual.<br/><br/>Red box: Relevant threats and individuals who pose a threat to the Machine or one of its administrators.<br/><br/>Yellow box: Individuals who know about the Machine.<br/><br/>Black box with yellow corners and crosshairs: Individuals who know about the Machine and communicate with it. The Machine designates these individuals as an &quot;analog interface&quot;. Root is the only known analog interface now.<br/><br/>Blue box: Members of government teams; the scope of this box is unclear, but includes agents acting on &quot;relevant&quot; numbers.<br/><br/>Wheeled vehicles (such as cars, trucks and buses) are coded based on status of individual passengers within.<br/><br/>Starting in Season 3, the boxes are slightly modified to have solid vertical lines rather than dashed ones, along with a central target identifying the vehicle being monitored.<br/><br/>The Machine also categorizes and marks watercraft and aircraft.<br/><br/>Boats, ships and ferries are assigned a white diamond. (Seasons 1 and 2) a5c7b9f00b

Report Page