Beware of spoilers... Spoilers beware... Spoilers beware... The important thing is said three times. After brushing "Weima's House" twice and repeatedly pausing to ponder the details, I finally understood it myself [frowning]. All in all, Mikio Miyoshi, who was transformed from a popular girl group idol into a powerful actor, his assistant who stayed in the United States, and memanie, a perverted fan, are all split from Takakura Yoko's multiple personalities...
The only real person who exists is a poor girl named "Takakura Yoko." Her spirit was extremely stimulated after being raped at the beef farm, so she split into three personalities: 1. Mizuma Kirigoshi, a girl group idol who had to succumb to reality for her future in life---because she couldn't change the "rape" facts, she split a personality that had to succumb to reality; 2. Feeling distressed and succumbing to reality, so split again, an assistant who is willing to protect himself: stay in the United States; Although he is willing to maintain purity, he is still being forced to succumb to reality, so in the first split personality-Wuyue Mima, when filming the scene of being gang-raped, the assistant Liu Mei Niu was full of face but could not change, so he could only walk away silently; 3. despise having to confront reality The person who kills in order to protect the purest and true self—because murder is ugly—so it splits off this particularly ugly and perverted fan memanie.
The reason for deconstruction:
1. Dreams and reality are constantly alternated, but the director does not fully connect them. The "dream" and "reality" that he sees exist, most likely in the fantasy of a specific person (Yoko Takakura);
2. Wei Ma was hit by a big truck but continued filming unscathed. How is it possible in reality? The most likely explanation is that this is a dream:
3. The most probable explanation for how a diaosi-level, ugly-faced, and unpopular fan has the financial ability to appear in every filming scene of the idol Weima is that it is still an illusion...
4. Everyone who died had their eyes stabbed. From a psychological point of view, this means that the murderer thinks that the eyes are unreliable and illusory. Why? because (both Weima himself and the audience felt) what he saw in front of him was an illusion. Last but not least, we can't just say "The House of Weima" is difficult to read; we can say it surpasses "Blue Velvet," "Deadly ID," "Fight Club," "Mulholland Drive," etc. I can only say that, as an anime, this is really a masterpiece. [strong]
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