I watched "The Ring at Midnight" a few years ago. I was at home alone at night. After watching it, I didn’t dare to turn off the TV and didn’t dare to make a phone call. I was alone on the sofa in the living room until I dreamed of Sadako falling asleep. I won't be scared by horror movies anymore. When I watched "Scaring the Dead" again, I began to understand that the reality is often beyond our imagination. And the scariest horror film for me is not bloody pictures, or cruel body anatomy (I didn't really feel horrible when I watched "Saw Cry"). It is because of the cruelty that the plot is close to reality.
When I first watched "Ghost", I didn't feel so scared. It feels that there are shadows on the photos is a very common plot, anyone who looks at it in ten to twenty minutes can guess the plot. Measured by the standards of a horror movie, it is really not a good horror movie. But maybe I should understand this film from other aspects. It should be more profound to see and understand from the perspective of watching a romance.
Many horror films use women as the protagonist and love as a clue at the same time. This probably also secretly shows that in love, a woman is the easiest to love a person deeply and cannot let go. Love is also the easiest feeling in the world to make two strangers resent.
In the film, freelance photographer Thun and his girlfriend Jane were involved in a car accident on their way home from a university classmate party. Thun instigated his girlfriend to flee the scene in an attempt to cause suspense to the audience from the beginning. At the same time, through the beginning of such a small shot, I told everyone what kind of quality Jane's boyfriend Thun is. Through the strange light in the photos, I gradually tell people that she was once an autistic female college student who was ridiculed and ridiculed by everyone. She met Thun, a boy who loves photography, from falling in love to separating in college.
The girls are reluctant, but the boys have decided. One loves too deeply, and one loves not enough. It happened that she was so unlucky to fall in love with a man who was so weak and dare not take it. But even so, she still loves him, even after death, she doesn't want to leave, spinning on his shoulders day by day. The drama sees not only fear here, but also sadness and sadness. No one can be blamed for all this, even if it is to be blamed, she is only to blame for loving the wrong person. But she did not wake up, she insisted on her promise, "love him forever." But her love is his greatest punishment.
He has the love of his life, which is a debt he owes for a while.
View more about Shutter reviews