For the ending, if it was you, which way would you choose?

Kyle 2022-03-19 09:01:02

In fact, this movie deliberately left two results.

1. Conspiracy theory: Explain the last sentence, whether to live like a monster or die like a good person. The protagonist is a law enforcement officer, choosing the former (monster) to exist as a mental illness, and the latter (good guy) to exist as a law enforcement officer. He chooses the wrong mental patient to live (admit that he is mentally ill, but people no longer believe him) Said, because he is sick)? Or is it better to choose a good man of law enforcement (faced with the fate of being tested by surgery, amnesia or death)? 2. Therapeutics: Explain the last sentence, whether he is living like a monster or dying like a good person, shows that he cannot bear the story of his past. In fact, he is already normal. Yes, from the perspective of therapy, the ending is his recovery. Up! But he couldn't bear the fact that he was living like a monster with a sin that could not be forgiven in his heart, so he chose to pretend to be crazy and let the hospital think that he could not be cured and operated on him! But no matter what kind of ending, everyone shouldn’t ignore the fact that he can’t escape from this island anyway.

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Shutter Island quotes

  • Teddy Daniels: They're experimenting on people here.

    Chuck Aule: I don't know, boss. How can you believe a crazy guy?

    Teddy Daniels: That's the beauty of it. Mental Patients make the perfect subjects, if they talk nobody listens to them!

  • Teddy Daniels: I am a federal Marshall. They can't stop me.

    Rachel 2: I was an esteemed psychiatrist from a respected family. Didn't matter.