Mia’s attending physician was right. The father and daughter were indeed suffering from induced psychosis. It directly affected his daughter and he saw the same hallucinations. The piece of paper that Mia picked up was the fuse. Seeing the story written by her father when she was a child, Mia’s induction began simultaneously, and the Faceless Man officially settled in three of them. Family. (The topic here is "Evil Invasion")
Mia is a good boy. She keeps writing stories about faceless people in order to help her father. She told the attending physician: I don't believe in faceless people, but my father believes. Mia’s aphasia can be explained as she can’t tell the illusion. She wants to write down the story and believe in the existence of faceless people with her father. This is a covenant between relatives. (The doctor said that only the closest person will suffer from induced psychosis)
After all , the young people's will is still relatively weak, and Mia, who is on the front line with his father, is gradually being eroded by evil spirits. To untie the bell, you must tie the bell, and only its creator can defeat the evil spirit. The man who got the truth from his mother returned to his daughter's bed. The father and daughter finally defeated the demons together and drove the evil spirits out of the house. Personally, I feel that the last scene blended family ethics, psychology, magic and various elements of horror movies very well. This is also the best place in Spanish horror movies. Gubao Horror and Pan's Labyrinth are good examples. So far, there are only horror movies in this country that I can take a look at. Japan, South Korea, and Thailand are already floating around.
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