I can't understand, are these hallucinations?

Ashleigh 2022-04-22 07:01:32

There are some questions for horror and suspense lovers who are serious about watching movies and cannot extricate themselves

: The main premise is: the water the male protagonist drinks contains hallucinogens and is hallucinogenic enough

. 1, the first time I saw a large group of eels in the spa in the autoclave Is it real?

2. At the same time as the spa treatment, a woman with very droopy breasts walked over to jerk off the man who was taking care of the electrocardiogram (why didn't she just snap with a black question mark on her face when she was watching), is this an illusion? What does this passage mean?

3. The first time I saw Pan Bo in the sauna room, is it real? After Pan Botou immersed in the water, he got up and asked what the stock price is now. Is it still an illusion to have to pack up and go with him?

4. It is found that the glass windows are full of water, and the people immersed in the water are replenishing water or are they dead?

5. The male protagonist escaped to the police in the town, and Pan Bo, who came out when he was persuaded to go back to the spa, looked very energetic and showed no signs of losing his teeth (shouldn't he be shriveled and dying early in the morning), is this an hallucination?

6. Every time a dead person is sent to the old church site to feed fish, the male protagonist's flush toilet will make a strange noise. Is it because there are really eels in it? Is it an illusion when the male protagonist opens the water tank and runs out of a lot of eels at the end? Before that, he had already mobilized the old people to leave, saying that there was medicine in the water that made them sick, so he should stop drinking that water without hallucinations, right?

7. It was the first time that the male protagonist was sucked by deep throat eel to squeeze oil (at least the first time the movie was released, I don’t know if he had been squeezed in the coma before, after all, he had lost his teeth before that) and later , why tell hanna, why would I want to leave this place? A hypnotized look, and later went to help Hanna escape.

8. After the male protagonist lost his teeth, he was forced to go to the dentist. The dentist used an electric drill to drill a hole in the center of his front teeth without anesthesia. What was he doing? Just to scare him?

9. Has Hanna grown that much in 200 years? Or does eating human oil stop growth? If he doesn't let her eat, he can grow up sooner, can he also come to his aunt earlier? Even, when her father waited for her to come to her aunt when she was an adult, wouldn't it be enough to force her to have sex? What are you going to do if you have to raise it for hundreds of years? . . ?

10. The male protagonist had several opportunities to ask for help from the outside world until he didn't take his colleague's car back in the end. Is it crazy?

The above are mainly the places that are incomprehensible. In fact, there are many details that are great, the scenery is even better, and the artistic technique of the film is also great, but I always feel that the director (the script) has deep meaning. Let's discuss together!

View more about A Cure for Wellness reviews

Extended Reading
  • Raymundo 2022-03-25 09:01:10

    The ad word came to mind: delicious, calcium in a blue bottle...

  • Hubert 2021-12-21 08:01:02

    Modern gothic style. The rhythm is very steady, there is time for precipitation, so it is not a surprise, but all kinds of weird. The director basically uses sight and hearing to shake the burden, rather than relying on lines. The place that should be disgusting does not deliberately disgust you, there is a kind of temperate beauty. But when the male protagonist is forced to open his mouth and throat, he can feel the collective discomfort of the whole theater

A Cure for Wellness quotes

  • 9 Year Old Lockhart: Dad? Dad!

    [on seeing his father jump off a bridge]

    Hollis: Ever been fucked in the ass by a twelve inch black dick? We're talking about prison here.

  • Volmer: You're quite right - the water is toxic unless it's purified properly. That Baron's only problem was using unwilling subjects. We've come along way in the past two hundred years. Now, we have plenty of willing volunteers seeking to cure themselves of the ills of the world.

    Pembroke: [brainwashed] I've never felt better in my life.

    Volmer: [to Lockhart] You see? Why would anybody want to leave?