The terrifying secret number nine

Rosemarie 2022-04-21 09:03:52

Black Mirror is the black humor in the British bones. For politics and technology, Secret No. 9 pushes the British black humor to the extreme. The difference between British dramas and American dramas is that British dramas more reflect the intention of the producers and do not cater to the audience too much. No. 9 Secret is written and played by the two Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith of "The League of Gentlemen", each episode is independent of each other but each episode is a perfect black comedy, Ironic reality reversals constantly. If the plot of the first episode is not carefully thought out, many important details will be missed. The specific analysis is as follows. Ian was the first to hide in the closet. Rebecca walked in the toilet for a while after entering the room, and was very fond of soap. After Rebecca entered the room, she went directly to the toilet and showed a fascination with the soap. After opening the closet, Ian was already inside, making a joke that his initials were "rip". Carl came in, Carl was Rebecca’s younger brother, and Carl had this kind of attachment to his sister and regarded her as a mother. Then came Carl's male partner, Stuart, who looked mean and kept making Carl unhappy. Then there's Rachel, Ian really likes Rachel's attempts to please Rachel but Rachel ignores her. Just as they were discussing the bird feeder Jordini, she was in the toilet when Stewart bumped into her. Mark and Elizabeth broke into the room to flirt, but were interrupted by a cry from the bird feeder, and embarrassed they also hid in the closet. The smelly John who didn't take a bath, which everyone hated, wanted to enter the closet, but was rejected and the child had to hide behind the curtains. In the end, his father came on stage and taught Stinky John a lesson, and also hid in the closet. That's when the truth of the story was revealed. Years ago, my father held a Boy Scout party in the room with Jordini, the cleaner, and let the children take off their clothes and bathe the children with soap in the toilet. This kind of evil is only for boys. In a certain party, a boy ran out and denounced his father's evil deeds, but in the end the boy's family was sent away with money to cover up his father's evil deeds. The story reveals the truth at the end but actually reveals the truth at the beginning. Ian said when Rebecca came in: "You have an unfair advantage over others", because Rebecca is a girl, and her father only violated boys. Rebecca's obsession with soap shows that she actually knows the whole thing. Things are even on the sidelines. Carl seeks help from his sister because of his father's violation, and his sister loves him very much but can't really help him to resist. Carl also became gay because of childhood nightmares. The clean-up worker Jodini was her father's accomplice. That shout was the slogan she used to protect the master from the wind. Thinking of himself as one of the masters of this house, he viciously sings that song in front of Carl. Mark and her wife Elizabeth were implicated but neither were good people. In the last closet full of people, Mark sexually harassed Rachel. Rachel looked back in panic and surprised Mark and called on Mark to get out of the crowded closet. Elizabeth kept hinting to Rachel's men's clothes. Li didn't realize it, and Elizabeth wept silently. Rachel is Jeremy's ex-girlfriend, and she has been connected to each other. Jordini commented on Rachel's dress when she went out of the toilet. Later, she asked Rachel and Jeremy in the closet what the relationship was. Explain that Jordini saw Rachel downstairs and Jeremy did something indescribable. Stinky John is obedient to his father. Stinky John has not showered after a certain incident. It is a childhood atrocity. Stuart, Carl's male companion, actually sensed the delicate relationship in this room from the beginning, and deliberately used soap to anger Carl, who is a selfish and sensitive person. At the end they remembered the boy named Philip who had denounced his father at the time, and found that the one missing was the man who called himself Ian, and Jeremy said that Ian hadn't come yet, and in the end, Ian locked the wardrobe and sang Sprinkle fuel on the closet while singing the Sardine Song. It turns out that Ian is Philip, and the RIP joke he made to Rebecca at the beginning was also a mockery of this wardrobe man. Songbian spilled fuel on the closet. It turns out that Ian is Philip, and the RIP joke he made to Rebecca at the beginning was also a mockery of this wardrobe man. Songbian spilled fuel on the closet. It turns out that Ian is Philip, and the RIP joke he made to Rebecca at the beginning was also a mockery of this wardrobe man.

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Extended Reading
  • Jules 2022-04-12 09:01:09

    Love the combination of Reece and Steve, but the level is not stable. The first three episodes are pretty good, E04 is boring, E05 is too obscure, there is no need to drop the book bag like this. E06 is a pit. All kinds of horror elements are used appropriately, but the plot is predictable. I'm still waiting for the big twist and it ends like this. It's a prank with the audience.

  • Chris 2022-04-13 09:01:06

    Two volumes and Steve, you two are enough!