Danse
A good criminal investigation drama is the most enjoyable for me, especially the way it tells it is restrained and serious, and it doesn't make up mysteries to create a terrifying effect.
"Dance" is such a drama
The plot is very straightforward from the beginning, and the cause and effect of the matter are directly explained.
The sewer pipe of the apartment was blocked, and the staff found the remains of suspected human bones in the pipe
The police quickly identified the suspect: a tenant named Dennis Nelson, searched his apartment and found some bodies hidden in the closet.
He is an ordinary-looking man who cannot be more ordinary. Wears glasses and a suit, lives alone, and has a dog.
In five years, he killed 15 homeless, drug addicts, and people who disappeared from society. Managed to dispose of their bodies, which were never found.
Maybe these "abandoned" people and Danse come home just for a meal, a bed, or even just a glass of wine and a chat.
At one point in the middle, Danse defended his killings, arguing that these people could only be seen when they were dead.
As if their "going life" that no one cares about is meaningless.
Whether a person's life is meaningful or not depends on the evaluation of others, especially those who force the end of other people's lives.
And Danse, probably out of convenience and the integrity of the corpse, killed people by strangling them to death, or drowning them with their heads down. Also bathed the corpse as if the owner of the body was still alive.
When Dan Si mentioned the kind of person who died, the time they spent together before killing this person, and so on, his expression was still very calm.
He could remember that the last dead man had fresh scars on his wrist, but he couldn't remember their names.
This made it impossible for the police to quickly convict him, and the detective had to question him in a friendly manner, after all, the suspect himself was the only source of information.
According to him, he used to be a police officer, but he left because of homophobia in the police station, and later worked in a local job center. Turns out the truth was that he desecrated the corpse in the morgue, and the police fired him.
The story also revolves around this serial killer. For the police and the biographer, basically both parties are unilaterally asking for information from Danse and being led away by him.
The reason why this man is terrifying is not only because he killed more than a dozen people for no reason, and accompanied himself with corpses
It's more because he talked about the day he murdered, and his expression was as ordinary and ordinary as he was talking about what he ate today. The unwavering expression on his face somehow made him believe his statement about his own murder.
In addition to the role of the sheriff, it accounts for a large proportion of the whole drama. It can be said that in the environment of the police station where you want to get by, you are more conscientious and conscientious.
From the beginning, it was known that Danse had been in the country for five years, killing more than a dozen people in London, completely undetected by the police. He was angry as well as shocked. The angry police received a call to the police, and it was obvious that they could stop the loss in time for their inaction.
But he himself, in this case, also reflects on himself. Whether it's a child or a colleague, he doesn't care much, and he is also an indifferent person. As he said to the biographer at the end, standing in Danse's weird-smelling apartment where the body was once hidden: "Sadly, I can't smell it anymore."
Because it took too much time to investigate the case and the pressure of public opinion was too great, he had to obey the leader's arrangement and quickly close the case.
He, too, became a silent executioner.
In the big city of London, new people appear every day, and there are always people who disappear. And among these inexplicable disappearances, fortunately there are still family and friends who occasionally miss them. And most of the unfortunate ones, such as those brought home by Danse, disappeared like ants at the feet of passers-by in a hurry.
May these people who have gone astray when they are alive, at least feel a little bit of the kindness that Dans does not reveal the purpose before they die.
The first job number OKLater
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