Hereditary Doom & A Midsummer Night's Fright

Dessie 2022-04-22 07:01:08

I remember it was the year before last. Hereditary bad luck was very popular, and the score was very high. Then I watched it, but I didn't watch half of it, because the rhythm in the front was a bit slow, and it felt like a little bit, and the disgusting place was particularly disgusting. , after seeing the accidental death of my daughter, I had a premonition that it should be a very sad story... so I abandoned it.

As a result, I saw someone recommend Midsummer Night's Horror last year. I didn't know it was the same director at the time. I watched it, and the thief liked it. I watched it back and forth three times. Picnic on the Cliff") is very exciting, and the ending is "cool".

After someone told me that it was the same director, I went to watch Genetics again, and finally felt: It just doesn't suit my appetite... (Babies with a similar title to Rosemary personally think they look better)

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Extended Reading
  • Retta 2022-03-20 09:01:33

    In order to win the war, Agamemnon used his daughter to sacrifice to the goddess. In order to please Paimeng, Allen traded his granddaughter with the devil. There is no forgiveness for hurting loved ones, and disasters loomed for the two families. A solid blood relative is the easiest to sacrifice, and a short sacrifice is the most worthy of the trade. Unable to explain his love to his son, unable to prove to her husband that she is awake, and unable to prevent the curse from coming. So I crowned you and sacrificed the supreme grace, not in vain of mother and child.

  • Dana 2022-03-19 09:01:04

    The director is skilled, but overall a bit disappointed. I don’t like this kind of "horror". I feel like I watched "Master Key" again. Some details have been given so many times. In the end, there is no more information, such as the room made by my mother. Models, schoolgirls and the like...

Hereditary quotes

  • Annie: I just need you to go and see upstairs. Please, Steve. And then... there's more.

    Steve: You mean, more than your mother's headless body? Of course there is.

  • Annie: My name is Annie. My mom died a week ago. So I'm just here for... trying it. I have a lot of resistance to things like this, but I came to these a couple of years ago. Well, I was forced to come and I guess it, um... I guess it helped. So, um... My mom was old, and she wasn't all together there at the end. And we were pretty much estranged before that, so it really wasn't a huge blow. But I did... love her. And she didn't have an easy life. She had DID which became extreme at the end. And dementia. And my father died when I was a baby from starvation, um... because he had psychotic depression and he starved himself, which I'm sure was just as pleasant as it sounds. And then there's my brother. My older brother had schizophrenia, and when he was 16, he hanged himself in my mother's bedroom and of course his suicide note blamed her, accusing her of putting people inside him. So... that was my mom's life... .And then she lived in our house at the end, before hospice. We weren't even talking before that. I mean, we were, and then we weren't. And then we were. She's completely manipulative. Until my husband finally enforced a no-contact rule. Which lasted until I got pregnant with my daughter. I didn't let her anywhere near me when I had my first, my son, which is why I gave her my daughter, who she immediately stabbed her hooks into. And I just... I felt guilty again. I felt guilty again. When she got sick, not that she was really even my mom at the end, and not that she would ever feel guilty about anything. And I just don't want to put any more stress on my family. I'm not even really sure if they could... could give me that support. And I just... I just feel like... I just sometimes feel like it's all ruined. And then I realize that I am to blame. Or not that I'm to blame, but I am blamed!..."