I didn't want to talk about feminism, it just happened to lead to feminism. Try replacing the heroine with other weak characters, and the strong x with other unbearable and inhuman tortures. It seems that the same applies, but it is undeniable that although there are a very small number of male victims, the vast majority The victims of sexual crimes are also women.
What's powerless is that there are still many men who think that strong sex is something like shouting in TV shows. In fact, as long as the other party doesn't want to, it doesn't matter. And people can't understand that The Tomb embodies it in a slightly extreme way.
The heroine's subsequent revenge is a way to materialize the hatred in her heart, and the deaths (or tortures) of several of the men were designed.
The torture faced by the first two men is not single, but has a dilemma: one is that the eyes can't bear to blink and die, or the other's body can't bear to soak the face in sulfuric acid or directly. Enter sulfuric acid; no matter how you choose, it is death, and the few minutes of struggle will make them more desperate and more ridiculous - this kind of despair that cannot be fought back is what the heroine experienced when she was abused, and now she adds this feeling to this feeling. The big price tag brings the audience and makes people feel the same;
In the design of the countdown to the death of the latter two men, the heroine left 1/10,000 hope to the police officer, and the police officer wanted to fight with Matthew for this 1/10,000 hope, but the irony is that Matthew is a fool. In contrast, Matthew died the happiest, because he was the only one who didn't want to hurt the heroine (but did so anyway).
If the female protagonist's state of mind expressed by the camera is not specific enough, then use this method
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