This should be adapted from the short film Tuner. Of course, there are many new plots behind it. The black humor is very smooth, and it is reversed again and again. I really don't know who to believe.
The previous plots have been explained very clearly. The most interesting thing is the ending. If it is true that the female boss died in a car accident as the male protagonist said, then it is unreasonable to blow the cans in the last scene, which means that he is lying. There are three points to confirm:
First, the details. He was really blind at the time, how would he know that the car hit the rabbit and caused the accident? Combined with the rabbit-head cane, this set of rhetoric should have just been made up! In addition, in the noisy environment of a foreign country, it is unrealistic to recognize the heroine just by shaking hands, unless he can see it.
Second, economic capacity. At that time, he had been working hard to save money in India and wanted to go to London. The economic situation was not optimistic. How could he suddenly have an extra friend to help him go to London? Where does the money come from for corneal transplants? Obviously, the last rhetoric of the male protagonist is untenable. Personally, I think the real ending is that he and the doctor killed the female boss and sold his organs, and made a lot of money. After all, this is not a good person. He wants to kill and eradicate his own blindness. As he said, any court will sentence him to death, and he can still earn a fortune by piggybacking on it himself, so there is no psychological burden.
Third, the character. The male protagonist himself is not a very positive character. He pretends to be a vulnerable group and enjoys everyone's care. Before the first time he witnessed the murder, he wanted to report it, but when he found out that the murderer was a police officer, he didn't want to do anything more. The second time he witnessed the murder, he just pretended not to see it. , until he pretended to be blind and was seen through, and threatened himself before starting to fight back. The personalities of these characters that were previously foreshadowed also did not match the final self-report of the male protagonist, and it was the previous style to continue the lie.
Of course, these are all personal opinions. The last scene of flying cans is very exciting. It is an open ending, which leads to a variety of possibilities. Five-star recommendation.
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