The thing that moved me the most for more than 2 hours was the indifference to life. It can be said that this is the original intention of the director to make this film. That's why there are people in the play who say that the dead live like mice and die like mice. This is the central point of the whole film. Needless to say, the murderer is ignorant of life. The wonderful thing is that under the arrangement of the director, the judges, doctors, and prosecutors who represent justice and impartiality are all like this. Forget the body bag when moving the corpse, the scalpel used for dissection is outdated, and when you see the organs taken out from the corpse during dissection, you will feel that human beings are exactly like animals if they do not have dignity. The brightest thing is that when the anatomist finally found out that the man was buried alive, the doctor who had been rational and scientific from the beginning deliberately ignored this detail and maintained his original judgment, which is similar to the characters in the play complaining from the beginning. The hard work and busyness of the work are echoed, which has a strong ironic effect on this group of people who maintain justice.
But it's not the director's best work, I prefer Three Monkeys, Uzak. Watching these two pieces of heart was seized, and it took a long time to recover after reading it.
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Once Upon a Time in Anatolia reviews