This is not a traditional zombie movie.
Some interesting points, such as zombies will talk about their favorite things during their lifetime, if this phenomenon alone, there can be many explanations for this, for example, you can just make a funny point, or make the zombies more interesting Human touch and so on. Then after the zombies were beheaded, what replaced the blood in the body turned into sand and soil, which can be explained by the fact that they were buried in the soil, but it seemed a bit far-fetched.
At the end of the day, there are many explanations that can be done before, but it seems that there is only one explanation left.
Everyone has a lot of things they want, and they will chase them continuously, just like human desires, some of the most primitive desires, they will not stop chasing, nor can they extinguish their desires. And this is not just one's own behavior, countless behaviors that one thinks of oneself will eventually attract more people to join. This is not a choice of one person, but a stage for a group of people. For the pursuit of desire, only the final death (the dust returns to the dust, the soil returns to the earth) can end.
There are about six types of people in this film. The first is zombies—people dominated by desire; the second is those two male policemen—fighting to control desire, although defeat is honorable; third One kind is the policewoman-a person who cannot bear the hardships of a serious life, and thus succumbs to desire; the fourth kind is a person who hides in the forest, can he be regarded as a bystander for the time being? Probably because he has extremely low desires, and even if he is a savage in the forest, he still has to read. (Hhh) That's why you can be outside the storm; the fifth kind is the children who ran out, not polluted by the world? The sixth kind is that magical woman, is it the one who plays with desire in nothing in the legend? Very otherworldly, very few people on earth can reach such a standard, so it can only be an alien. I don't quite understand the last three. Just talk casually.
I used to think that the author was conveying a point of view to us (with a certain critical nature), but I found that it didn’t seem to be the case. The author was just using a witty, a slightly American tone, and a fun, to us. It conveys something that exists objectively, without any critical nature. (Because, after all, people who have no desires probably don't exist on earth.) This way I find it very interesting, whether it is something to be expressed or the state of things when they are presented. It's really interesting, so I can watch it again when I have time.
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