It's not the first time I've seen this type of suspense film, and it's not the first time I've seen a sequel to this type of suspense film of the same series. Anyone who has watched the previous work will have mastered a certain skill and rhythm when watching the second part. They will narrow their eyes to pay attention to boring conversations, and tune to the blue light to see the details on the screen.
Maybe it was the first part that shocked me too much. The end of the sequel only aroused a little aftershock, which made me feel unsatisfied. At the same time, there were very few online comments about this sequel. Some thoughts in my heart and Guessing is like an island in the ocean, and I can't find any boats that resonate with me, even a drift bottle. The plot of the movie is roughly that the mother-daughter duo colluded to pretend to be Norman's dead mother, forcing him to be sent back to the hospital with a neuropathy. The focus of the film is whether Norman is crazy in the end.
Personally, I think he is pretending to be crazy, not really crazy. At the end of the movie, he killed the suddenly appeared biological mother and carried her into the room. The voices of the old woman and Norman could be heard from the room. No doubt, Norman began to play two roles again. Even so, he wasn't really crazy.
He was aware of his mental illness in the hospital, but if he knew it was a disease, but he couldn't forget his beloved mother, he pretended to be a dead mother under the control of his own reason, pretending to be drunk but living here sober What about the world? I don't know how to describe this situation in psychological terms, please explain it to friends who know this aspect.
In the end, Norman completely accepted this "drunk man awake alone but everyone thinks he is drunk" way of life, because it can evade the punishment of the law, he secretly hides in the house without everyone's disease, and it is exciting like cheating. of men and women.
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