Strong discomfort with the black-on-white subtitles at the end. That discomfort transcends a thousand possible ways of killing. Everyone's discomfort area is different, which creates the form of life we choose to seek pleasure and avoid suffering. There is no absolute black, white and gray, and the bondage and kidnapping of moral concepts is a limit that human beings cannot overcome. Freedom due to limitations is also a training norm. It's hard to say that brainwashing has a positive or negative distinction, but if the breaking is only through practical operations in the opposite direction, it is also extreme. Do not kill and kill? In the end, there is no real way out of the constant exploration of science such as philosophy and psychology. Discussing the original form is far less practical and moving than making money to buy a house and a car. Therefore, wrap up the primitive animal nature to maintain graceful plunder in the world. Or escaping the world and relying on divinity. Furthermore, it pays for most of the mediocre in the world. We say love and we say art, which may be the only value and outlet that is higher than human nature. The editing and shooting methods are not groundbreaking, and the era when there is no master is just a gathering of masters. The idea of the story is that serial killers have been said a million times. Coincidentally, the grafted philosophical and artistic materiality reorganized the unique possibility of reasoning in film audio-visual. All the themes of all forms are loaded together, and the techniques used by the creators of 369 are sublimated.
The wise say you are nothing more than that. And his ridiculous ending just proved the nature of the serial killer's mental problems. The director did not intend to talk about a sci-fi film that is out of bounds. I might be trying to understand the director.
Good works keep opening up all kinds of possibilities. Even if it is a second discussion that is not surprising. After all, there is no fun. The arrival of artificial intelligence seems to be even less fun.
View more about The House That Jack Built reviews