Split Personality (Dissociative Identity Disorder DID on DSM-IV), the easiest to play. The protagonist is a split personality, which I already knew before I watched it. But when I actually watch this film, I still don't know which is the protagonist, which is splitting, and which is the murderer. This is where the director's genius lies. Of course, when you see the ending, you know everything.
Fat people, prostitutes, children, children's step-parents, fake police officers, prisoners, young lovers, bosses, female stars and her drivers constitute this unique "group". The fat man is his main character, the prostitute can be said to be his bad childhood memory of his mother, the child is the inner evil caused by the shadow of his childhood, the child's stepfather represents the cowardly side of human nature, the mother represents the mother's love, and the fake police represent his fraud. , the prisoner represents his recklessness and cruelty, the young couple represents distrust and deceit, the boss reveals the greed of human nature, the female star is vanity, and the driver is kind and witty. Everyone was locked in a small hotel on a rainy night, and then something terrible happened. People in the hotel died one by one, and everyone was suspected. Vanity died first, then distrust was gone, cruelty was gone, cowardice was gone, maternal love was gone, deceit was gone, greed was killed, kindness and wit and deceit were gone, and only the original was left. Evil, and the source of evil. This order of death is subtly added with a countdown of 10, 9, 8, 7..., which makes the film even more tense and exciting.
All people make up the main character. All people represent a part of human nature, vanity can kill, deceit can kill, cruelty can die, but the initial evil left behind is the most easily overlooked, and the most powerful, evil, destroying everything in human beings. The most evil part of human nature, isn't it just in the subconscious that you can't detect it, don't want to face it, and don't dare to admit it? The "human nature is inherently evil" expressed in the film is chilling. I can't help but think of the "Ominous 666" I watched before, the children in it, the innocent faces of the top ones, and the evil eyes of the penetrating ones, staring into the bones of the audience, making the audience chill with fear. This is where a horror movie really succeeds! It doesn't rely on ghosts, bloody violence, or the audience's fearful screams when watching, but makes you think about it unconsciously after watching it, and then a chill hits from behind.
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