Freud believed that dreams are a window to understand a person's subconscious and a channel to reduce stress. Dreams themselves are the product of the satisfaction of certain desires when people are in a state of sleep. Peterson, a young female psychiatrist in the film "Doctor Edward", out of professional ethics and love, implemented dream interpretation and free association for John John, who pretended to be Doctor Edward, to treat his abnormal behavior and help him face up to his childhood experiences. The resulting psychological shadow and piece together the memory of Dr. Edward. The lowest level of desire satisfaction can be traced back to childhood. Because some things that happened in childhood may be forgotten or forgotten for too long and buried in the bottom layer of memory, but they will be awakened and reproduced subconsciously whenever they encounter similar situations or stimuli. As a child, John slid down the slide and knocked his younger brother who was sitting at the bottom. His body was stabbed on the sharp iron fence and died tragically in front of John's eyes. Therefore, when John and Edward were skiing back and forth from the high slope, the painful experience that was deliberately buried to avoid injury was awakened from the subconscious, which made him indistinguishable from reality and mistakenly thought that he was pushing Edward down the cliff. This crucial conclusion stems from Peterson's dismemberment and bold speculation about John's frequent dreams. The content of the dream is divided into the apparent and the hidden, the former is the surface meaning of the dream, and the latter is the motive and essence of the dream. Dreams have been condensed and simplified, replaced by putting the cart before the horse, dramatized by image reconstruction, and re-corrected the arrangement and combination to complete the camouflage of the hidden phase. Borrowing the idea of the Liberal Association, Peterson stripped the cocoon of this seemingly patchwork and chaotic appearance, and restored the before and after of Dr. Edward's disappearance and death. At the end of the film, the police found that Edward's body had bullet holes and concluded that he did not simply fall off a cliff while skiing, which made the plot abruptly turn. It seems that the previous reasoning will be completely overturned, but Peterson will "talk" The Mochison and John's dreams correspond one by one, allowing the truth to finally come to the surface in its entirety. Doctor Dowager: Dreams of Unraveling Murder Mysteries
Freud believed that dreams are a window to understand a person's subconscious and a channel to reduce stress. Dreams themselves are the product of the satisfaction of certain desires when people are in a state of sleep. Peterson, a young female psychiatrist in the film "Doctor Edward", out of professional ethics and love, implemented dream interpretation and free association for John John, who pretended to be Doctor Edward, to treat his abnormal behavior and help him face up to his childhood experiences. The resulting psychological shadow and piece together the memory of Dr. Edward.
The lowest level of desire satisfaction can be traced back to childhood. Because some things that happened in childhood may be forgotten or forgotten for too long and buried in the bottom layer of memory, but they will be awakened and reproduced subconsciously whenever they encounter similar situations or stimuli. As a child, John slid down the slide and knocked his younger brother who was sitting at the bottom. His body was stabbed on the sharp iron fence and died tragically in front of John's eyes. Therefore, when John and Edward were skiing back and forth from the high slope, the painful experience that was deliberately buried to avoid injury was awakened from the subconscious, which made him indistinguishable from reality and mistakenly thought that he was pushing Edward down the cliff.
This crucial conclusion stems from Peterson's dismemberment and bold speculation about John's frequent dreams. The content of the dream is divided into the apparent and the hidden, the former is the surface meaning of the dream, and the latter is the motive and essence of the dream. Dreams have been condensed and simplified, replaced by putting the cart before the horse, dramatized by image reconstruction, and re-corrected the arrangement and combination to complete the camouflage of the hidden phase. Borrowing the idea of the Liberal Association, Peterson stripped the cocoon of this seemingly patchwork and chaotic appearance, and restored the before and after of Dr. Edward's disappearance and death. At the end of the film, the police found that Edward's body had bullet holes and concluded that he did not simply fall off a cliff while skiing, which made the plot abruptly turn. It seems that the previous reasoning will be completely overturned, but Peterson will "talk" The Mochison and John's dreams correspond one by one, allowing the truth to finally come to the surface in its entirety.
View more about Spellbound reviews