The act of the little girl burning the doll at the end

Meaghan 2022-03-25 09:01:18

I've seen one, two, and three. The plot of this three is a bit of a dog. When I go back to save my sister, I don't know that my sister will also travel and be a lunatic murderer. Well, I finally found out that it was really similar, and decided not to save this lunatic. Back on the night of the fire and blocked the door to ensure that my sister died completely. Finally, I can live a decent life, and my mad sister is relieved from death. Why don't you guys go back and buy a lottery number for the next day if you can't do something useful? Are there any pursuits? The evil that the little girl laughs at the end shows that it should have inherited the ability to travel just like in the first or second part, and the behavior of the doll she burned may also be from the future to the past to change something. For example: when the little girl was five years old, a neighbor girl who had a bad relationship took this doll and showed it off in front of her. She was very jealous, and then stole someone else's doll and put it at home. Later, when she was eight years old, someone else came to her house to play and found it. She was stigmatized as a thief. In order to sell the stolen goods, she traveled back to the past and burned the doll, and then laughed evilly.

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Extended Reading

The Butterfly Effect 3: Revelations quotes

  • [first lines]

    Mother in the Park: Alright, Josh. Time to go.

  • Sam Reide: Thanks, Goldburg, you're brilliant.

    Harry Goldburg: Brilliant. Yeah, okay. Thought you were gonna say "sexy." But hey, that's okay. No problem. Still gonna have a good day.