In the middle of the night, a man in uniform rushed out of the road from the forest, and an oncoming car hit him to the ground, and he was admitted to the hospital in a coma. It seemed like the end, but the story had just begun...
Why run at midnight?
Why panic?
All doubts were unsolved because of the man's coma, and the police launched an investigation.
The man was the security guard of a suburban funeral home. He was on patrol at the time. When he found something unusual, he called the supervisor and called the police. The overly frightened security guard tried his best to escape from the work building before he could wait for backup. In a car accident, what happened to frighten the security guard?
It was a missing female corpse, a female corpse that disappeared in front of his eyes.
Maca, a local female entrepreneur, died suddenly when she returned home from a business trip, and her body disappeared inexplicably the night she was sent to the funeral home. Jem led the police to contact Maca's relatives and friends to understand the situation. Her husband Alex was not at home, and there was no trace of sadness in the police's questioning. Alex's indifference aroused the suspicion of the police.
Maca is a powerful woman who controls her husband in addition to controlling her own business. Alex was originally a university teacher, and after meeting Maca, regardless of the age difference, the two got married. Maca brings Alex to work in the company's research institute, turning an ordinary teacher into a technical director; the older Maca gives Alex a shortcut to success, but also makes him feel like a puppet being manipulated Life.
By chance, Alex met Carla, a female student, and the hormones of youth were deeply attracted to him. From teachers and students to friends, from friends to lovers, and deeper and deeper feelings, Alex confessed all his past to Kara. Carla wanted to break up and leave after learning that Alex was married; who knew that Alex actually offered to murder his wife, and then stayed with Carla.
Maca returned home from a business trip, and Alex handed the poisoned wine to Maca who was taking a bath; everything went as he planned, eight hours later Maca died of poisoning, and the forensic autopsy showed a heart attack. . Maca's body is taken to the morgue, and Alex arrives at the home of his lover, Carla.
As the two low-key celebrate the success of their plan, Alex receives a call from the police, and the sudden news scares the two of them that Maca's body is missing.
Alex came to the funeral home to be questioned by the police. As the police investigation deepened, Jem and others found that Alex's suspicion became more and more serious; when he heard the results of Jem's investigation, along with the constant occurrence of abnormal situations in the morgue, Alex felt more and more that it was Ma A scam planned by the card.
Based on the visions around him, Alex deduced that the smart and prankster Maca must have seen through his plan, set up a bureau to pretend to be dead, deliberately left clues, and framed himself to be suspected by the police.
The police intensified their search and found that there was no woman Carla at all. Based on the various clues found in the search, Jem observed Alex's abnormal behavior as a widow, and concluded that he murdered his wife and stole the body to cover up his crimes. .
Just when everyone thought the case was about to be finalized, the body of the missing Maca was found in the forest...
Is it Alex who directed and acted a wife murder case, or did Maca set up a game to make fun of her husband's fake death?
Or, neither of the two, the plot staged a major reversal?
The ending took the audience by surprise.
Director Oriol Paul, yes, the Paul from "The Invisible Guest".
It has to be said that the director prefers various revenge stories and is obsessed with various plot twists. Watching his movies always makes you feel like you've seen through the clues and give you a surprise attack at the last minute.
This "Girl's Corpse Mystery" was made earlier, and some details can still find loopholes. Compared with the later "Invisible Guest", it is slightly insufficient, but the flipped brain holes of the two films are enough for the audience to recollect.
Public Account: Purple Style Talk
View more about The Body reviews