First of all, this movie is based on real events and is more immersive than other serial killer movies in the first impression. What's more interesting is that the director and screenwriter deliberately ignored the description of the motive and process of the crime, but have been explaining the trial process of the case. For me who don't understand the incident itself, it makes me believe that the screenwriter has not drastically altered the story. But it is precisely because of this that the overall story is relatively flat, without strong dramatic conflicts.
The appropriate benefits of the arrangement of the escape section in the storyline: The male lead a law student chooses to escape under the premise that the intelligence and professional knowledge are in place, which concealed the anxiety of the male lead after the female lead deliberately alienated him. At first glance, the defense of the male protagonist in court seemed easy and impassioned, but after thinking about it carefully, it did not show any professional qualities, it was just pure sophistry. As for the interviews with young women, it explains from the side why the male protagonist can often succeed even when his modus operandi is not clever. The last part of the male protagonist confessing his crime to the female protagonist, coupled with the details in the previous two intimate scenes, once again proves that the male protagonist initially regarded the female protagonist as a prey, but at the end he did not start with the true feelings.
I have to say that the movie itself is well laid out, the storyline corresponds before and after, and the logic is rigorous. The director and screenwriter are still attentive. The actor's face value is also online, which is worth seeing.
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