Detective fbi, investigating serial homicides (or unknown disappearances, homicides must have corpses), and there have been cases pending in the town for a long time. What would you think of when you see this?
What is the sheriff of our town doing? From the American point of view, is it wasting taxpayers' money?
In the ending, the ambiguous attitude of the pregnant woman and the sheriff shows that the sheriff does not possess the mental state of the oracle to kill people introduced by him, and does not have it from beginning to end.
At the end, the young fbi agent had a horrified expression and told the inspector that he believed the "story".
Reversely, if the murdered fbi agent finds the murderer and brings the murderer to justice, then the murderer will not be just a corpse, then the murderer will definitely be found, and this murderer is not the sheriff or the pregnant woman. Or the serial killers in the small town are them.
To sum it up, there may be three plots and only one ending. The plot may be one, the serial killer is the town sheriff, and finally kills his brother and kills the agent, but this is hard to imagine winning love; second, the serial killer is his brother, and he finally killed his brother in order to cover himself The fact of killing, killing the sheriff, this may happen, that is, his father is crazy. The story is partly true, but this is actually ridiculous, but it caters to the analysis of some people I have seen above.
In the third plot, his brother was also killed by the murderer, and the angry town sheriff killed the murderer, so the case became an unsolved case. When fbi started investigating, the wife of the town sheriff was pregnant. He may not want to go to jail, or lose his job because of the unsuccessful case, and eventually killed the agent.
There is only one ending. The town sheriff has not been blamed for his poor work performance and has not lost his job. At the same time, the new fbi completely believes and believes without questioning. This is a mysterious and unsolvable case. Even the "cursed pending case"
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