I racked my brains to come up with a "justifiable" reason for the murder of the forensic father and son

Kennedy 2022-03-27 09:01:09

Never try to pry into a lady's privacy, in life or after death! Ha ha ha ha! Just kidding~ After reading the comments, it is obvious that many netizens agree with my first impression, that the death of the forensic father and son is a bit unfair, and even not friendly to the industry that should be respected in forensics in reality. After thinking about it later, maybe it is also a direction to find a breakthrough in the understanding of the film itself from the cultural differences between the East and the West: as a forensic doctor who believes in science, we must adhere to the superstition of science to the end. It was precisely during the autopsy that the forensic father and son were bewitched by the hallucination, and the fundamental belief in scientific evidence collapsed, resulting in complete control by the hallucination. The forensic doctor in the movie, especially the father, is obviously not religious. His education for his son both inside and outside of work is obviously guided by science (authority), but the most ironic thing is that he didn't do a single thing that he asked his son to do. To: For example, he requires that he must work from the beginning to the end, and that he must be conscientious during the dissection process, but in fact he hides in the elevator in the end. It was his son who proposed to carry out the dissection to the end before he could go back and continue. Another example is the son's suggestion When the corpse was a witch, my father didn't believe in the existence of witches and thought they were just innocent victims, but then he acquiesced to the power of witches and asked for self-sacrifice when he was tortured by hallucinations. The karma repayment should be unhappy is something we are very obsessed with in the East. Looking for the classical ghost stories in our cultural radiation circle basically conforms to this routine. We also don't quite understand (thankfully this lack of understanding) how deeply the Western traditions of draconian rule of monotheistic religions have been. I feel that the logic of fundamentalist believers should be "not absolute belief is absolute non-belief". Under this requirement, the doctors and their sons obviously had no faith in God, but they also did not have absolute faith in science. They were confused by their own feelings and fundamentally gave up the empirical spirit and did not focus on anatomy to find the cause of death (the arson scene can be seen simply I'm desperate, obviously the charred lungs in the autopsy have proved that burning is useless) Even the belief in witches in the end is closer to the utilitarian trading nature of many people on our side burning incense and cramming when they have something to do, so the sacrifice is not pious. In the monotheistic system, God is absolute, and there is no room for consultation and bargaining. The only object people can make deals with is the devil, and deals are extremely unequal, and human beings always lose miserably. If it is replaced by the witch system, it is easy to understand that the transaction will not have any good results. Combined with the father's memories of his wife, it is even more conclusive that the father committed arrogant sins on the patriarchal authority, so he was punished more painfully than the son who had been under his father's rule and did not dare to resist in substance.

The father killed the devastated and dying cat without hesitation. What did he do to the sick wife? The video doesn't say it directly. What the film bluntly says is that the son did not succeed in resisting the patriarchy, and he subconsciously inherited the arrogance of his father. Hurts—like his dad did with cats.

Just imagine, if father and son are firm enough in science, like Frankenstein, obsessively indulging in dissection, searching for the scientific basis for the cause of death or immortality, regardless of any hallucinations; First, weep and cry to the cat for various rescues. If the rescue fails, then weep and cry and repent of the indifference to the wife. Then the father and son accuse each other and finally embrace each other and weep and understand each other. Laliu breathed until dawn (after all, which lady doesn't like to watch gossip melodrama, don't witches also like to eavesdrop on elevators and confession and didn't make trouble, hahaha); even they were devout enough for the phenomenon of witches in front of them, and their father devoutly offered Sacrifices and sons couldn't bear to kill their fathers and didn't stop, and the final result might not be completely destroyed. After all, the Gao Zan film review made a lot of sense. All the sacrifices in the film were interrupted and unsuccessful, which led to a series of tragedies. And the witch is obviously not the setting of Gaya's grievances, not everyone who has contact with her will die (the police officer is alive and well). But all this supposed procrastination is often the point at which other horror characters get ripped off by audiences. It can be seen that the characters are difficult to do. It is too difficult for them to recognize what type of film and what kind of plot setting they are in. After all, God (editing) intends (drama) to fool people~ Of course, the above is purely a personal imagination and a clever one. The main reason is that the movie itself is very exciting. The rhythm is calm and calm, creating foreshadowing and contrast, oppression and suspense, which is very high-end and stunning. What's even more amazing and eye-catching is the female corpse lady, who is so beautiful and abstinent, dangerous and attractive, I can't help but praise it with five stars~

View more about The Autopsy of Jane Doe reviews

Extended Reading
  • Marques 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    actors who like to play corpses

  • Lizzie 2022-03-26 09:01:07

    So, get off work when it’s time, go out on a date and go on a date, take the initiative to join the class (︶︿︶)

The Autopsy of Jane Doe quotes

  • [first lines]

    Deputy Ballard: [over radio] Sheriff, you gotta get down here.

    Sheriff Burke: [crouching down] We got an ID on her?

    Deputy Ballard: No, sir. No relation to Paul and Carol.

    Lieutenant Wade: Who's she?

    Sheriff Burke: Well, for now, she's a Jane Doe.

  • Tommy: You can't kill someone this way without leaving a trace on the outside. She doesn't even have a broken nail.