The undertone of conservatism, the core of folk warning

Jasen 2022-03-25 09:01:10

This is an American version of the folk admonition story of "don't believe in evil", and the core is exactly the same as those ghost stories that you can often hear on Internet radio, "you can disbelieve, but you can't disrespect".

The defect of the film is also here. In order to warn people to respect the taboo, the father who only believes in science must be guilty, must reflect, must repent, and must die, so in the middle and late stages, the whole film begins to become discrete and deliberate.

The undertone of the film is a conservative and traditional confrontation with attempts at secular ideals after religion has been deconstructed (Dad's interpretation of the Salem witch hunt "they were innocent young women" and the later change of mind, which will have consequences. Birth is due to accident, an attempt to fight back by relying on conservatism's reliability of "tradition" and "custom" after the power of religion was no longer sufficient).

In any case, I think the professional, rigorous, quick response, and decisive action dad is very handsome.

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Extended Reading

The Autopsy of Jane Doe quotes

  • Emma: What's that for?

    Tommy: To make sure he's dead. There used to be a time it was hard to tell a comatose person from a dead one, so coroners tied bells to everybody in the morgue. So if they heard a 'ting', they knew somebody down there wasn't quite ready to go.

    Emma: So, why do you have one?

    Tommy: Well, I'm... I'm a bit of a traditionalist.

  • Tommy: Let's get the fuck out of here.