Heal Sick, Heal Worse

Cheyanne 2022-06-17 22:03:30

I got it from a certain sound, so I looked for it. It was indeed a bit of a waste of time. I basically watched it in fast-forward, just watched it at normal speed when the male protagonist was playing the video on his mobile phone. cough cough. However, after removing some redundant plots, you can still see some obscure things that the director wants to express.

When the heroine woke up in the opening scene, the fishermen on the island kindly came to deliver 4 fish, giving the audience the image of the friendly and friendly tourism island.

The fisherman's behavior is actually to thank her for the sacrifice she will make for the island. The dead fish "sacrifice" to the heroine, and the heroine sacrifices to the island. From the small to the big opening, the director is wonderful.

---------- Beneath the good skin is a dirty, ignorant, and selfish heart, as is the case with all the islanders who believe in offering sacrifices to magic.

So, is there really sacrificial magic? According to the script, sacrificial magic does exist, and this small island does have the blessing of some kind of god. 200 years of freedom from typhoons, no disasters and no diseases, and healthy and longevity of the elderly are all evidence of this.

The male and female protagonists were unintentionally chosen as the sacrificers in the bar. They were oiled with corpse oil, given necklaces, and the female protagonist was killed after they finished their affairs on the grass.

----------Combined with the subsequent development of the plot, here is a simple comment on the sacrificer, corpse oil, and necklace.

Sacrifice selection conditions: husband and wife, the woman must be pregnant, and the sacrificer must be willing to at least not resist.

Corpse Oil: Powerful hallucinogens, aphrodisiacs, fast-fertilizing agents, and broken tablets. Must be used when offering sacrifices to remove resistance from involuntary sacrificers.

Necklace: An artifact that can eliminate disasters, eliminate pain and death. It is recharged by the soul of the sacrificer. Once a year, it can be fully recharged at level 1 and level 2. The necklace can only be effective on the island.

Level 1 Charge - Non-Ritual Death. The soul infusion of non-ceremonial death cannot exert the greatest blessing effect of the necklace. The soul infusion of this method is weak and is only enough for personal enjoyment. But this kind of ordinary charging alone is enough to make a person immortal. Imagine that the wearer commits suicide once a year to complete a recharge, until the automatic recharge of old age and death, the next year to continue to die of old age, and the recharge is repeated for immortality.

Level 2 Fully Charged - Sacrificial ritual stitched death of an impregnated woman. The fetus of a pregnant woman is the strongest soul. The meaning of stitching may be to allow the necklace to be fully infused with the soul, so that the blessing effect of the necklace can be maximized, buried in the ground or hung on the statue, so as to benefit the entire island. Waiting to recharge after a year.

So, this explains why the female protagonist woke up in the hotel after being crushed to death by the male protagonist.

The various hallucinogenic and cumbersome plots in the follow-up will not be repeated. It is quite boring to make up the time. The following is a simple analysis of the resurrection of several characters and the heroine at the end.

Male protagonist: It should be the same as the fish-slaughtering behavior of the fisherman at the dock. He was killed by the villagers or committed suicide due to the hallucinogenic effect of corpse oil. Because the heroine wears an artifact, she lives and dies, and can communicate with her soul, so she can witness the tragic death of her husband and be awakened by her husband at the end of the play.

Female owner of a tattoo parlor: The female owner should be a new resident who has just settled on the island. In order to help her son heal, she came to the island to seek the last hope of the legendary sacrifice. So when she saw the heroine's necklace, she really wanted to give it to her son, but she thought that the sacrifice would also be able to cure her son, so forget it. Then, the old doctor came to the tattoo parlor to get corpse oil. After saying something to the owner of the tattoo parlor before leaving, the owner chose to commit suicide. Because I don't know Thai, I guess the content of the whisper should be: Your son won't live to sacrifice tonight. Therefore, the female boss chose to commit suicide, and found out in her conscience that she told the female lead to escape.

Foreign landlady: The only person on the island who is fluent in English on the island that provides accommodation for male and female hosts. The organization should retain her rights for the organization's internationalization. After all, she can speak English, so she can fool other foreign friends.

In the end, the heroine escaped the sacrifice, ran away in a small kayak, and died on the sea. The island was hit by a typhoon and was razed to the ground, and all the islanders should be spared. As mentioned earlier, the necklace will not work when it leaves the island. When the body was towed back to the island by the lifeboat for centralized disposal, a police officer put the necklace back on the hostess, and then she woke up again. In the future, she can only live alone on this lonely and disgusting island; or, she still chooses to discard the necklace, choose to die, go to the real paradise to meet Neil again, and let the necklace sink in and never see The sea of ​​the sun.

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