Will there be a crisis in the seemingly peaceful and orderly life of the middle class? The film tortures us in a slightly suspenseful way and tries to bring our minds into the loop of cracking the question. A hidden camera almost non-violently destroys a middle-class family, and lies, estrangement, and suspicion pervade the whole family. It turns out that behind everyone's seemingly peaceful and orderly appearance, there is an indescribable story. However, the director's fundamental purpose is obviously not to solve the case, otherwise this will become a detective film. The male protagonist forced his childhood servant child to commit suicide, which seems to be helpless, but in fact it is more like a murder. Modern people all have different degrees of guilt. Invisible cameras cannot restore this guilt, but they can attack and magnify this guilt. This is the most helpless place for modern people, they are too fragile.
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Caché (Hidden) reviews