Confused about the theme of the film, what the film means.
It doesn't seem to mean anything. This ending is like halfway through the filming. The director has other things to do, so he stopped. It can be said that there is no ending.
When I watched Ang Lee's Teenage Pi's Fantasy Drift. After a long time, I suddenly realized. The two movies are the same.
Birds are suggestive of sex. Melanie and Mickey first met in a bird shop with no one else around. The movie expresses that kind of plot, and like that π, it's not really what happened. In fact Mickey sexually assaulted Melanie. Melanie was very rusty and went out to catch the bird in the cage. Bird out of control. . . . . . This is symbolic of Mickey's exposure to the promotion's molestation on Melanie. Then the proprietress came out, and Mickey restrained the "bird" by himself.
Melanie has a crush on this man. So she took the initiative to find him. Kind of like Stockholm Syndrome. She came to a town full of sexual perverts. On the boat, Mickey has substantial sex with Melanie. In the film, Melanie is pecked by a seagull and bleeds. It can be noticed that Mickey's bird has grown larger, symbolizing an erection. The blood left behind represents Melane's virginity.
Melanie lives with the female teacher, and in the middle of the night there is a pervert to harass them. The expression in the film is the dead seagull at the door.
And then there's the town's frenzy. And a large number of sexual perverts went to Mickey's house to try to XXX on Melanie. Mickey's mother looked very similar to Melanie, which was a hint of what happened to Mickey's mother back then. Mickey does not have a father.
In the end, the "bird" round XXX where Melane was brutally broke into the wall, at least the symptoms of the heroine are the same as those of being XXX. The spirit was greatly traumatized.
Well, I may have a serious mental illness. It actually looked like this. . . . .
Like the fantasy rafting of the juvenile Pi I mentioned, a cruel tale of a shipwrecked surviving cannibalism is made up into an interesting rafting adventure.
Birds are such a cruel story too.
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