Among the seven perverted scripts that playwright Marty is going to write:
No. 1, Block J, the masked killer who only kills the underworld.
Number 2, Hans, the old man who stared at criminals to hell, dog thief, cancer-stricken wife shot by dog owner Charlie.
No. 3, the violent dog owner Charlie, has the same mistress as Billy.
No. 4, the avenger of the Viet Cong, went to the United States to hunt down the US Army of C Company after the war. Hans arranged for him to self-immolate Mingzhi.
No. 5, the serial killer's killer, Maggie, Zach's couple.
No. 6, Zach, Maggie's couple, broke up because of washing their hands, and hugged the rabbit to find Maggie.
No. 7, Billy, also No. 1, Marty's friend, a dog thief, killed his girlfriend, and wanted to influence Marty's plot.
Isn't this... 6 perverts...
Marty is writing the story of the perverts, and he's getting involved in it. In addition to violence, blood, and suspense, is there any glimmer of humanity? Charlie's love for dogs doesn't count. The extreme that a dead woman can't die a pet is a kind of pervert. Only at the end, the killer because Marty didn't swear by his life to put the message to find Maggie in the end credits of the movie, made an appointment to kill Marty on Tuesday, Marty accepted his fate, but Zach let go, which is the biggest highlight. The laying out of several stories in the whole film should be the basis for Marty to finally accept his fate calmly.
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