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Uriel 2022-04-19 09:02:11
Suspenseful blockbuster influenced by Freudian psychoanalysis
A few things that impressed me about the film:
1. Peterson went to JB's room to express his love. The two expressed their sincerity and kissed each other. The doors of the heart were opened one after another, and the opened doors were superimposed on the scene of the two kissing affectionately. It...
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Therese 2021-12-22 08:01:02
Analysis of Dr. Edward's Criminal Complex and Psychoanalysis (Some spoilers included!!)
Let me first talk about as a psychology student who has just come into contact with Freud's psychoanalytic knowledge, I have some personal analysis and thinking about the crime complex in the film that combines the self, the id, and the superego. As the main line of crime complex developed...

Michael Chekhov
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Chaim 2022-03-27 09:01:09
It goes without saying that the work of the master is perfect in every respect. Constrained by the level of stunts at that time, the film is also brilliant, the process of exploration and reasoning is tight, and the suspense is overflowing all the way. But the reasoning came to fruition, the real murderer became the dean, which seemed a little unexpected; and Edward's cause was this, and he felt that waiting for more than an hour for the result was a fraud.
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Sarina 2022-03-27 09:01:09
c'etait bien le psycologie s'adopter en film
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Dr. Alex Brulov: Women make the best psychoanalysts until they fall in love. After that they make the best patients.
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Constance Petersen: I think the greatest harm done the human race has been done by the poets.
Anthony Edwardes: Oh, poets are dull boys, most of them, but not especially fiendish.
Constance Petersen: They keep filling people's heads with delusions about love... writing about it as if it were a symphony orchestra or a flight of angels.
Anthony Edwardes: Which is isn't, eh?
Constance Petersen: Of course not. People fall in love, as they put it, because they respond to a certain hair coloring or vocal tones or mannerisms that remind them of their parents.
Anthony Edwardes: Or... or... sometimes for no reason at all.
Constance Petersen: That's not the point. The point is that people read about love as one thing and experience it as another. Well, they expect kisses to be like lyrical poems and embraces to be like Shakespearean dramas.
Anthony Edwardes: And when they find out differently, then they get sick and have to be analyzed, eh?
Constance Petersen: Yes, very often.
Anthony Edwardes: Professor, you're suffering from "mogo on the gogo."
Constance Petersen: I beg your pardon!