I wasn't really interested in the movie at the beginning. The male protagonist's intermittent descriptions give us a glimpse of what happened to him. Yes, it's a series of things, and I don't think the word story is appropriate here. He met several people who influenced him and led him down a path of no return. When I saw a third of the time, I even wondered what the film was trying to say. Isn't this just a group of technical youths who have been beaten by chicken blood to commit cybercrime?
But at the back of the film, the atmosphere and mood are suddenly different, reasoning and judgment, it turns out that the male protagonist is schizophrenic! Everything came to a realization. Until the last ten minutes, I found myself being played again.
This movie is the second time I've seen it. This fragmented narrative method is precisely to echo the description of the male protagonist. You think you are God's perspective and see everything. But in reality? He only shows what he wants to show you, and you only believe what you want to believe. In order to let his companions and himself retreat, he designed a schizophrenic "illusion" - through the investigation of the female official, it was inferred that this illusion became the truth she identified. Perfectly erased the traces of the three companions, quietly. It's like that juggling, four become one, just because the other three are hidden, but the eyes will tell you that there is only one.
There is no absolutely secure system, and people will always be the biggest vulnerability.
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