After amnesia, does a person's sense of morality and values ​​also lose?

Norbert 2022-09-16 12:53:41

What this film basically wants to express, I think it is the moral hazard problem after a person loses his memory.
In fact, I have been thinking about a question, if one day you lose your memory and you don't remember whether you were a good person or a bad person in the past, then if you start anew, will you go down the old path? Or do you go down a different path due to different circumstances? Or maybe after you retrieve your memory and find that you are not the kind of person you want to be, do you choose to accept your past identity, or do you abandon your past self and choose to become someone else entirely?
To put it simply, after amnesia, is a person's sense of morality and values ​​also lost? Or do you just forget the appearance, and the inside is not far away?
If there was a movie that delved into this question in depth, it would be a great one.
I still remember the movie with the same theme, In Bourne's Identity, Bourne tried to find his identity after losing his memory, but in the end he did not betray his original identity.
In Unidentified, although the ending can make sense, how can a person suddenly change from a cold-blooded killer to a person who sings moral triumphs after losing his memory? This change is a bit sudden, and the director did not focus on the description, but skipped it. In fact, if less space was devoted to the fighting scenes and more space was devoted to the portrayal of the characters' hearts, the film would be more profound and successful. Now this film can only be discussed in general action films.

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Extended Reading

Unknown quotes

  • Gina: [In a self-deprecating way about her apartment] The walls are made of cardboard, but it's home.

  • Rodney Cole: [to Harris] Jurgen figured us out. By the way, he's dead... and he died very well. I'm afraid that isn't something I'm going to be able to say about you. I'm sorry. I'm really, really sorry.