Although I didn't understand this form of implantation at first, I thought it was because it was easier to get closer to the object to be killed, and it was not easy to be found.
One person possesses the consciousness and body of another person, and the game between the two consciousnesses must be very entangled. The film vividly expresses this entangled and struggling sense of destruction in various forms such as waxing, trance, and masks. In particular, the androgynous picture is very shocking, and it also vividly shows the loss of two people in different situations. Both seem to have lost themselves, but they seem to have themselves very truly.
The final ending is also open-ended. I think it’s very good. When the possessed male protagonist was opened by the female’s child and shot and killed the female’s child, the child said mechanically, freed, three Words. Explain that the child is also an possessed. There is only one way for them to return to their bodies, and that is to die, commit suicide, or be killed. So is the husband of the shot heroine the possessed? Is the heroine the possessed? Does the world she thinks is real? Is the husband and child she remembers real? None is known.
A movie that makes people think about it, it's very attractive and interesting.
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