end, they didn’t fully understand what this monster looked like. It was a bit like being stripped. The skinned wolfhounds are quite programmatic in cannibalism. Don't eat fresh ones and eat them only when they are rotten. I chose to attack people in the middle of the night, made a big cut around my neck, and then buried the person in the soil, and waited for the blood to slowly flow away, and the body rotted, so I could eat it. Such BT method of cannibalism is a bit different from what single-celled animals do. It is a torture to humans. Even if you were not dead at the time, you were still half-dead and slowly dying.
The western United States is vast and sparsely populated, with a small number of people scattered across large tracts of deserts and grasslands, but Indians are scattered all over the country in the form of tribes. This provides a good horror and horror theme, not only the conflict between races, but also the mysterious monsters, which is naturally very lively. It's just that the normal pictures are in the dark night, and the light is not enough, it looks very difficult, and it also makes it impossible to see the appearance of the monster, even though it has been recognized in the dark.
In fact, the film has a higher meaning beyond horror. The reason why monsters can eat people is because people have killed all their food and turned to look for other edible things. Towards the end, it is even more ironic that some Indians have the poison to destroy monsters, and the brain-disabled policeman who discriminates against people of color hangs them. This man, not only destroys the environment, but also fights inwardly. He is really killing himself. The real source of terror is mankind.
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