but instead forgot the cruelty of being murdered because of the dream of heaven.
Although the father paid the price of blood to pursue the murder suspect, the
younger sister got the notebook that recorded Harvey's crimes at a thrilling moment,
but did not promptly call the police and let the murderer escape.
In the end, the murderer did not fall into the French Open,
but fell into the abyss and died.
One year later, the corpse in the box should have been decayed long ago, and the
murderer did not dispose of the corpse until a year later.
Strange! Strange! Strange!
Justice has not been done,
death has become a desirable paradise, and
calm forgetting allows both the living and the dead to transcend.
Is this another interpretation of murder by the director?
The nervous heart
that was suppressed by Susie fell into a trap is in such an ending.
There is a feeling of being teased. It's
not that Susie is dead
but the audience is dead.
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