After watching the third episode, I have a new understanding of the opening song, because I think the murderer is the person who looked at the beautiful, dreamy, innocent and innocent when the heroine was a child, that is, her father Franklin
The feeling started when her father admitted to her that he had lent jonathan half a million dollars, and he said with tears in his eyes that he was really there to help his daughter who wouldn't ask for it, and that if he hadn't lent the money he wouldn't have There is remorse for a murder case, and the image of such a father suddenly comes alive, which reminds me of the description of the heroine educating her son at the beginning of the first episode, which is to let the son live in a fantastic bubble forever, and he will not find out until he enters the society. He is hopeless. This is actually the protection that the heroine's father has always been doing to the heroine. It also perfectly corresponds to the opening song. In fact, the perspective of the opening song is a bit weird, but from his father's point of view, the image of the opening song It's very logical, and the song is like a lullaby to tell the little girl that everything is fine, until the roses on the wall turn into blood, and the little girl's fingers burst the bubble, and the theme of the show is also Start here.
When I watched it, the barrage was also discussing the clues of the murderer. Many people said that she was the heroine in this episode, but I still think she was not. After gradually understanding the incident, Grace has indeed become very sensitive and intense, acting logically. It also started to get messy, but I think it's more like the collapse of the worldview brought about by the bursting of the fantastic bubble. A series of chain reactions followed. Grace couldn't accept the world outside the bubble. She was on the verge of collapse all the time, and even began to miss the bubble world. Everything in it, but her reason told her not to, so she tore back and forth.
Speaking of Grace's father, Franklin is different from Grace and Henry. He didn't grow up in a fanatic bubble. Many details can explain this, such as his completely different way of doing things when confronted by the police. Note that he went to the street downstairs of the victim's house and looked into the window. The father knew a lot of things and knew how to deal with the police. He also left first on the day of the fund-raising party, and it was very likely that he was there. After seeing Elena, he also has the motivation, the time and the ability. The result of this matter has nothing to do with him. Compared with his own direct exposure to Jonatha, this is to let Grace know about it through other means. Whether it is public opinion or prison, it can be forced to let Grace know. The daughter left this jerk husband, and Jonathan was punished, maybe from another perspective, as a father, he can regain the good time with his daughter like the opening scene.
I have only seen the third episode so far. If I see the fifth episode and have a new feeling, I will come back and update it again.
View more about The Undoing reviews