The coincidence is too buggy, it seems to involve all the people and things related to the Armstrong tragedy, and they all took the Orient Express... I have been entangled in the whole film who is the real murderer and who planned all this, But I never expected the ending, everyone participated in the murder, and everyone was the murderer...
"Everything is either right or wrong, and now there are more of you."
Judgement is actually very limited at times. The end of this movie still shocked me. At the end, how they teamed up to commit murder is presented in black and white. Every detail and even everyone's expressions are meticulous. The perfect rhythm control and the soundtrack make I feel more like opera or some other performance art. The director shows the brokenness of human nature in a more artistic way. This snippet perfectly describes what Inability to judge is. In the end, she said, "I planned it alone. They are not killers. I have long lost hope of living, but they still exist." I was still moved when I saw this. The reversal of the ending is also fascinating, with the last shot she fired at herself after all, and then... empty. Broken lives, broken lives, and broken lives... all dominated by anguish and anger in my heart. It has always been believed that human beings are rational and civilized, but in fact they are not.
Seeking justice and defending justice relying on the law alone is far from enough. Where is the conscience? In the long river of time, there are so many unfortunate people, and some truths, the more they explore, the more uneasy they become.
The detective finally said, "The scales of justice cannot be balanced forever. What I have to do is how to accept the imbalance in this world... There are no murderers on this train, only people who need to be reborn."
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