David Lynch was thinking about something. . . Since there is no correct answer, let me make a blind guess. Originally I thought the male protagonist was sexual disgust, but after reading the top-ranked film review, I thought it made sense. The male protagonist should be impotent. The monster baby is the male protagonist's embodiment of sex (the image of this baby is too obvious). The male protagonist's fear of sex in a long-term sexually repressed environment. (At his girlfriend's house, he didn't dare to cut the chicken. After the fork pierced the chick, the chick was bleeding while moving, and the male protagonist panicked. The girlfriend's mother asked him if he had slept with his girlfriend, but he did not dare to answer.) At the same time, the male protagonist was small and small Soft, full of inferiority complex about sex. (Frequently took out a small tadpole to play with, and finally put it in the cabinet in disappointment) After marriage, the two tried to have sex (girlfriend feeding the baby, the male protagonist's gratified eyes), but it didn't go well. (The baby refuses to eat and keeps crying at night) So far, the male protagonist has developed a disgust for sex (the baby is sick and becomes nauseous). The girlfriend is very impatient with this, but the male protagonist has no response. So the female protagonist became active (forcibly occupying the sleeping space of the male protagonist), still not good, she could only live by masturbation (close-up of crazy rubbing her eyes), and finally her girlfriend could not stand the sex-hungry life and chose to leave (repeatedly pushed before leaving) The bed is a manifestation of forcing the male protagonist to have sex). In the second stage, the sexy neighbor took the initiative to come to make an appointment. The male protagonist's obedient and sullen character made him unable to refuse, and it was better than face. sexuality. Afterwards, the male protagonist fell into endless inferiority and guilt (all kinds of curious pictures). The next day, the male protagonist found that the neighbor had invited a wretched and ugly man to mock him. In the end, the male protagonist couldn't stand the shame and castrated himself. (Open the baby's intestines and break the belly, revealing two balls, and pierce them)
What a miserable man.
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