It was discovered that his wife was having an affair with another man. At the beginning of the film, Mott wore a big green hat. I think this was a big blow to Mott. Since then, he's been in a tailspin. She lived in seclusion in a wooden house in the Mississippi jungle for half a year. This ordinary life was interrupted by a man named Schutt, who suddenly appeared at the door of Mott's house one day, saying that Mott had plagiarized his own work and brought his own manuscript to prove it. The man reappeared shortly after, asking Mott to revise the ending of the story. Bizarre things happened one by one, and the tragic death of his pet dog made Mott even more convinced that Shute was using bloody violence to subdue himself. He thought about calling the police and even hiring a private detective, but he found nothing and no evidence of Schutt's attack. After being stimulated by this, Mott was terrified. The small movement in the house in the middle of the night drove him crazy. After sweeping his house, he found out that it turned out to be a mouse. Later, his and Abby's former love nest was burned to ashes, and then he had another skirmish with Abby's current boyfriend Teddy over insurance. The bloodiest scene in the play appeared. Tom (private detective) and old man Ge died tragically in the car. Mott fainted suddenly. When he woke up, he found Schutt reappearing. The "killer" was still aggressive and wanted him to modify the ending of the story. After disposing of the body, he was still struggling to find the magazine that could prove that he did not plagiarize, but after finding it, he found that the pages with the article on it had already been torn off! In his room, another "self" appeared, constantly questioning himself, and bloody images kept appearing. At this point, I think most of the audience have already understood that the so-called Schutt is actually what he assumed, and he did all the murder and arson himself. The dog was killed by himself, the fire was set by himself, and the two were cut by himself. In the end, he can finally usher in a "perfect" ending, kill his wife and her lover, bury him in the corn ground outside the window, and continue his writing while nibbling on the cob.
Crazy on the left, genius on the right. Aside from violence and brutality, Mott is indeed an excellent writer, and the story he brewed has become a bestseller. The seeds of this story may have sprouted from the moment he felt the tension between the husband and wife. The divorce agreement has not been signed for a long time, indicating that the two parties are still in love, and they can still look at the old love vaguely in the chat. However, Abby's constant persecution of DIVORCE made Mott think about it and must revise the "end". He can really kill people invisibly, because of schizophrenia, his dual personality plays both the writer and the killer, but he doesn't know it afterwards. I'm not only assuming that if there was no Abby's betrayal, Mott would have directed such a suspenseful plot, and put murder and arson all into practice in order to modify the so-called ending.
Love can make a person or destroy a group of people. As the novel says "Todd Downey thought woman would steal your love when your love was really all you had, was not much of a woman". For a woman, let so many innocents become a foil. Everyone has their own secret window, perhaps the same as Pandora's box. Would you like to open it?
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