"Psycho 2" puzzles

Stephania 2022-06-14 17:29:48

The male lead: Norman The female lead: Mary The female lead's mother: Lila The male lead's biological mother: Spur

The second part is more suspenseful and thrilling than the first

1. The boy was killed by the female protagonist's mother, Laila, and the motive for the murder was to frame the male protagonist Norman. When the heroine's mother, Laila, was killed, she was also changing her makeup in the basement, and there was also a dress with polka dots inside.

Figure a boy was murdered by the murderer

Figure 2: The murderer's clothes are red and white

Figure 3: The scene before Lyra was killed

At that time, the male protagonist Norman was in the attic, and the female protagonist Mary said that it was the male protagonist she locked up, so the male protagonist Norman had no conditions to kill. When the heroine Mary explained to her mother Laila that the hero did not kill, and dealt with the blood in the bathroom and answered, the heroine did not clean up the murder scene, excluding the heroine Mary as not the murderer and the person who restored the scene.

The hotel where the male protagonist Norman is located is relatively remote. When the police came to his house to investigate the case and returned to the police station, her mother was already waiting, indicating that the female protagonist's mother, Laila, knew about it long ago. Laila was suspected. In addition, the figure of Figure 1 is the closest to the heroine's mother (in the hotel where the heroine's mother lives, in the dispute between Mary and her mother Laila, her mother is a more paranoid person).

During the dispute between Mary and her mother, Laila, in the hotel, and in the conversation with the police station hostess' mother and the police, it was revealed that her mother did not tidy up the scene. So the boy's murder was not the scene handled by the heroine's mother, so it may have been the scene handled by the hero's mother.

After the boy was killed, Norman heard someone calling him that night and he was supposed to meet his mother Small. By the end of the day, his mother should have told Norman, Mary, and her mother, Laila. He began to express disbelief and fear, and wanted to kill Mary at night. Norman never knew who that person was, until he began to show that he believed in the existence of his biological mother and questioned Mary (the detail is that when the doctor came the next day, Norman would look into the house when talking about his mother, and Claiming that her mother wasn't dead, so he knew his mother was in the house at the time and closed the door behind, saying that his mother talked to him in the basement, but the doctor didn't believe him)

2. Tommy and Mary's mom, Laila, were killed by the same person

Figure 4: The length of Tommy's skirt when he was killed, pure white

Figure 5: There are pure white spots on the sleeve length

Figure 6: The length of Laila's skirt when she was killed

From pictures 4 to 6, the length of the clothes and the pure white dots on it (the white and red dots on the boy's clothes) indicate that the murderer is the same person. Is it his other personality or his mother Small. The killer's stature is more like him, and in "Psycho 1", the detective is killed first, and so is Tony. It turned out that after Laila died, when the doctor appeared in the basement, Norman also appeared, like the murderer returning to protect the scene. And when the coal fell, the male protagonist took a look, and he was not surprised when he saw the body. I'm more inclined to kill Norman than kill his mother Small

Figure 7: The first detective is killed

Some people think that Layla was killed by Norman's mother, and that she was buried in the coals because Small did not have the strength to dispose of the body. How was Norman's mother killed at that time, when Laila was killed, Norman was at home, and it was impossible not to hear. The doctor entered his house so lightly that he found the doctor in the basement. It was also laborious to bury the body upright. It is possible that Norman’s mother had already begun to show up. Afterwards, Norman and Norman’s mother dealt with the scene. Mom had been protecting Norman in the dark part of the house (after the boy died, he had said: his mother was protecting him. The one who kept peeking was his mother), the doctor didn't leave after he left, and saw Lay After pulling the car away, he immediately called Norman. At that time, Laila was dead and could not drive. Norman was pulling the phone again, so the only person driving was Norman's mother. After the play, Norman's mother came from outside. Yes, I think it should also prove my conjecture

The reasoning that Norman's mother can drive solved some of my doubts. Both the boy's and Tony's bodies were found in the swamp, and it was one person who handled the bodies. In the first part, Norman was dealing with the corpse of the heroine, and he knew it himself. But when Tony and the boy died, he didn't know it. Norman did not know that the boy was killed to restore the scene. Tony was another murderer of his character, and it was his mother who handled the scene (after all, he was also a driver), so he didn't know it afterwards. Another point was that when he was called to the swamp, Tommy's trunk was the first to find it, not in the car. He killed 6 people before Tommy. In the first part, he was very skilled in handling the corpse of the heroine and put everything in the back of the car, and said when the detective asked: old habits are hard to change. So from this detail, it also means that Norman did not deal with it.

In the end, Norman's mother said that they were solved one by one, which is a bit misleading. You will know that Norman's mother killed someone. If Norman's mother killed, Norman's mother does not need to pretend to be her sister, that is, Norman died. Murder like a mother. I'd be partial to Norman's mom just helping Norman handle the scene

The note appeared three times, and I felt that the first and second times were placed by Norman's mother. Norman's mother entered Norman's house before she was released from prison at 5. She was familiar with his home and knew about Mary and her mother, Laila, and warned Lai. Don't let Mary stay. By the way, Norman's mother is the old lady who was very warm to him on the first day of his work.

The third piece of paper is inclined to his fantasy. When Norman passed away, there were decorations in his mother's room. Only he, Norman and Lila went in. Lila would not restore the decoration without the scene, and Norman's mother was only after he was in prison. When he got out of prison, he had never seen the decorations of his deceased mother, only his imagination was reasonable.

Later, calling the plot, the doctor came out on the second floor. At that time, Norman saw the doctor first and let the doctor hide it, trying to frame Mary

There are also some small details: that is, Mary's father is the lover of her aunt in the first movie.

Summary: 1. The boy was killed by Lyra, Smaller handled the body 2. Tommy and Lyra were killed by Norman, Tommy was killed by Smaller, and Lyra was probably Norman and Smaller together The processed corpse part 2

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Extended Reading

Psycho II quotes

  • Norman Bates: Just don't let them take me back to the institution, all right?

    Mary: [cradling Norman] Don't worry, Norman. I won't.

    Norman Bates: You smell good.

    Mary: I do?

    Norman Bates: Yeah.

    Mary: What do I smell like?

    Norman Bates: You smell like... like the toasted cheese sandwiches.

    Mary: What?

    Norman Bates: That my mother used to bring me when I was in bed with a temperature. She used to do lots of nice things for me before she went... before she became...

    Mary: Shh. Just remember the good things she did for you. Only the good things.

    Norman Bates: I can't. They're not there anymore.

    Mary: Of course they're there!

    Norman Bates: No, the doctors took them all away. Along with everything else.

    [crying]

    Norman Bates: Except... except those sandwiches.

  • Norman Bates: [on the phone] Mister Toomey, if this is you, you're sicker than I ever was.

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