About Notes and Strollers

Luis 2022-03-25 09:01:16

First of all, the main premise of this movie is about the hallucination-like experience of the heroine when she is on the verge of death.

What confuses me is the actual meaning of the black man, the woman in white and her baby and the stroller. In fact, at first, I also agreed with everyone's comments that the black man was a playboy, and he was the driver of the car that collided with the heroine's father at the time. However, when I looked back closely at the footage of their vehicle collision, I realized that maybe everyone was thinking too much. Version I think:

On Christmas Eve, the heroine's father took the family to her mother-in-law's house to celebrate Christmas. However, due to fatigue driving, he collided with the oncoming female driver-a woman in white, and her baby in the car should have been placed in a stroller (it can be explained that there were two strollers in the back, and the woman in white was reminding the heroine father that they had collided She died of herself and her own child, and also explained that she was the driver, and the child was placed in the stroller, which had nothing to do with the man in black). Then the woman in white and the baby died on the spot. On the heroine's side, the order of death of her boyfriend, brother, mother, and father is the order in which everyone left in the actual car accident, and I agree that this order is in line with where they were at the moment of death. My father turned the steering wheel to the right in the car accident, so the son-in-law in the middle of the back row was thrown out, which can be directly understood as being dismembered. Then the younger brother approached the fuel tank and was burned to death, so to speak. Then there is the co-pilot's mother, who should have been thrown out abruptly, so she landed on the back of her head. Then there is the heroine's father, who should have injured his thigh and died of excessive blood loss while waiting for rescue. The heroine sat behind the main driver and suffered the least injuries, so she survived to the end. The black man should be the passing driver. He called the police and called an ambulance, but the female doctor went late because there was no fire and missed the best moment to rescue the heroine's father. This can also explain the content of the note from the heroine's father. He left a note before he fell into a coma from the blood loss, knowing that he might not survive.

When it comes to the ethical plot part, I want to say that the mother and father should have had a dialogue before dying. The mother explained the fact that she cheated, and the father also told the daughter about the past. It was because he knew that he could not survive, that's why his mother said to let him do what he wanted to do after he got out of the dead end. Then the plots of the younger brother and the son-in-law were also fantasized before death. At the moment of death, the son-in-law thought that he had not proposed and ended like this. The younger brother thought that he would take the dog before he could. .

The only thing that puzzled me was that the man in black was too relaxed about the car accident and felt a little suspicious. But if it's true that he was in another car at the time, then the plot doesn't make sense too logically, shouldn't he be taken away by the police to ask about the accident? Shouldn't he be hurt in any way? Whether he is a driver or a passenger, he can't be so calm and unscathed, right? Anyway, this place does have some bugs.

My humble opinion, I hope everyone can communicate with each other and question each other.

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Dead End quotes

  • Marion Harrington: I'm pregnant...

    Richard Harrington: ...I smoke pot.

  • Laura Harrington: [after Frank nearly hits an oncoming car] I hope you slept well! Maybe I should whip you up some breakfast!