What kills the heroine is life

Clinton 2022-09-10 22:01:42

When I first saw it, I thought it was an ordinary story of death, but at the end I realized that it was not the heroine who made the death, but that life forced the heroine to die. The psychic game is just a fuse, igniting the demon in the heroine's heart. This is a life tragedy covered in ghost films. Because of the death of her father, the mother was busy with work, and her child, who was only 15 years old, took on the responsibility of taking care of her three younger siblings. The age of 15 is exactly the age of youth and ignorance and desire the most for freedom, but she can only take care of her younger siblings like an old mother. There is a desire in her heart, and there is also a kind of helplessness. The huge pressure makes her produce demons. Do ghosts really exist? I'm not sure, but if the heroine's behavior of hurting her younger siblings is attributed to mental illness under great pressure, it seems to be able to explain it. The hostess is pitiful. The most pitiful thing is that she realized that she was the murderer of her younger siblings. She chose to commit suicide. Maybe she had been suppressed by life and didn’t want to live, so she promised herself to live on this day. The curse of death.

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Verónica quotes

  • [last lines]

    Romero: [on the walkie-talkie] Go ahead.

    Police on the walkie-talkie: The girl just died.

  • Hermana Muerte: You know when you go inside a house and they've just made French toast? It's easy to tell the smell. That smell of cinnamon... fried bread... warm milk. If you close your eyes, it's like they're on a dish in front of you. You could almost take a bite. I was a Language and Lit teacher. The French toast is a metaphor. What grade are you in?

    Verónica: Ninth.

    Hermana Muerte: So you know what a metaphor is, right? And you also know we aren't talking about desserts.