Tell how a mentally ill person kills one after another, and then store the heads of the deceased in the refrigerator... In this way, do you feel that this horrible and perverted psychological film has become commonplace?
Even if you insist on telling the story from a mentally ill angle, it is not necessarily fascinating.
However, this film is very clever in the choice and setting of the protagonist. The protagonist is determined to be a childlike character, and from the first-person perspective, he completes the film's unique expression, which serves multiple purposes.
When Jerry was a child, he could visualize his subjective thoughts into the "objective" world in his eyes (it can be said that most people experienced both subjective and objective feelings in childhood), but this "talent" was due to his senior spirit. The misleading of the patient's mother made him more convinced of the true existence of these "objective figures" and continued into adulthood. His lack of growth in the process of growing up allowed him to be a child who can behave in a few words even though he is an adult. Then, his ability to be "artistic talent" in my opinion is undoubtedly a disaster for a "child".
And the disaster hit Jerry’s fairy-tale world, so the mean cat, the loyal star, the bright pink tones, the butterflies lingering around, and the talking head, holding the cowardly kind Jerry happily on stage. ~~
This was originally a sad, terrifying and lonely story. . .
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