"Swallowing" is supposed to be a small production film, with a somewhat unpopular subject matter, and the filming is suspenseful and horrifying. More importantly, it has given the audience a lot of inspiration from the pathology, psychology, and philosophy of life. I have seen this kind of person who likes to swallow foreign objects, but loses self-control ability like this, and is addicted to drugs like drug, I have seen it for the first time. It's not about swallowing iron objects or lacking iron and fiber in the body. Mother-in-law's understanding is too simple and too mechanical. In the first half of the movie, the audience always keeps their hearts and minds and pays attention to the heroine's life experience. Everyone knows that this is the key to her illness. Her life experience is not correct, and she used to be awkward with her mother before; after marrying into a rich family, everything seems to be worry-free, but the whole family including her husband ignores her existence, and only cares about the child in her belly, which makes her feel this way. The indifference and embarrassment of the marriage relationship;...then the original mental depression has become more and more serious, and the ingestion of foreign bodies is just a manifestation of this depression. It cannot be said that psychotherapy and medication are ineffective, but the best treatment is to end the entanglement buried in the heart of the heroine, and to give her a statement that all this is not her fault. She sought out this statement from her biological father, and achieved perfect self-salvation. I would like to praise this former rapist father's last statement to his daughter, and also blame her previous birth environment, let her know the truth of her own life experience when the child could not bear all this. I am not putting the cart before the horse, but only from the perspective of the development of the movie's story, from the perspective of the heroine's depression and self-salvation. Judging from this movie, the rich are not necessarily noble, and the rich are not necessarily their own dishes. In life, we still have to grasp ourselves, find the right direction and set the right position, and live out our true self independently, freely, and bravely. The end of the movie gives the audience such a revelation.
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