When I just read it, I didn't particularly understand it. When I flipped through the comments, I suddenly felt that the hut was opened.
The male protagonist did not kill, but he did have a relationship with a number of female students, but his moral values did not allow him to admit it. In the end, he successfully deceived himself and believed that he had not cheated.
Once, when he had a relationship with a student, he thought that the student fell out of the car door and hit his head in a coma for a while. He was frightened, but luckily the student was fine.
Later, another of his students disappeared and died. Under the long-term pressure, he performed self-hypnosis again, believing that he was the murderer, and linked the incident of the schoolgirl who fell out of the car door and hit her head last time. Associating out his murder process, he linked the deceased schoolgirl's head to a tree.
The male protagonist is a philosophy professor. When I watched this film, I thought of the lunatic on the left and the genius on the right. Such a sentence.
The whole movie is still wonderful.
View more about Spinning Man reviews