This film can be said to show the humanized side of ghosts. Except for those gloomy scenes and weird plots, the more terrifying people are evil people, and the reason for the appearance of ghosts is not only revenge, but also a "love". Although Nora remained in the world after being cremated, not only did she let the heroine go, but she didn't even kill the male protagonist completely - whether it was because she still wanted to accompany the person she loved or asked him to suffer for the rest of his life is unknown.
Compared with the "horror" displayed by the grudge and the midnight bell, ghosts seem to focus more on "supernatural": ghosts return to the world for various reasons, and the things they can do are no longer just scaring and killing people, and even in some places. There is no lack of warmth. The front and back echoes are well done, and the Thai elements inserted in the middle also make the film less similar and shriveled. In the end, when the heroine came to see the hero, the Nora reflected on the door had almost no horror effect, and even made people feel a little relaxed about the result.
The role of Nora is pitiful. The plot of her mother hiding her corpse reveals the morbid love that Nora has received since she was a child. This morbid love is rooted in her life, causing her to suffer from alienation, neglect and bullying, and then she loves the male protagonist with the same blindness and fanaticism. Death ran over head-on. Most importantly, Nora still revealed that she was a human shadow even after she became a ghost. The indiscriminate murder of many ghosts makes it impossible to see the part of them that once belonged to human beings—the goodwill towards the same kind of foundation, and most of the precursors to their appearance belong to natural creations such as animals, insects, and water. Explain the reason for death. They can't be appeased, they can't communicate, they can't hold onto their minds, they just have great power and great malice. In contrast, Nora's connection to the camera and her targeted actions make her look like a human soul. To say who is more terrifying is naturally the former, but there is no doubt that Nora is more vivid.
The theme of evil and evil is cliché, but it's a classic. Judging from the similar behavioral logic of ghosts and humans, it is a natural law rather than a "proclaimed theme". Because of the ability of ghosts to override human beings, this law is more simply and rudely implemented; while individual actions will have more uncertainty and deviations, which has led everyone to have heard of "killing fire gold belt, repairing bridges and repairing roads" No corpses". But when viewed from a macro perspective, this law still emerges from the flood of history, like a golden thread that runs through, entangled in the silent web that binds us in the past, now, and in the future.
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