When I watched it, I always unconsciously thought of "Crazy Flowers". Although the social classes of the protagonists were different, they were forced to kill people—at least the first time they killed them. "Women" is backed up by real stories, and the sacrifice of Charles Theron's image is probably the biggest gimmick. When the old man said "I think I can help you, my wife and I will help you...", there was a glimmer of hope for the society in the film. Aileen wanted to let this kind old man go, but God's will tricks people, so Aileen is even more desperate, and the cry when she pulled the trigger may indicate that her last moral bottom line has fallen helplessly.
Regarding "homosexuality", to be honest, I think Aileen treats the child as a treasure, the driving force for killing, the spiritual support, anything can be said, but "love", I don't see it.
But I still feel that some parts of "Female" are too deliberate, and it is "wonderful" similar to "Lost".
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