It feels a bit unfinished. The female corpse has to let others suffer again. Her pain is finished, but I feel that there are many places that have not been explained:
1. What is manipulating a corpse? And the purpose of those corpses doesn't seem to be the same. They drive the male protagonist and his son around like dogs. They rushed into the office for a while, then drove out of the office, and then rushed back to the autopsy room, locked the door, and then Open your eyes and open your mouth and let them out again. Are you playing cat and mouse?
2. Mistakenly attacking his girlfriend as a corpse. The male protagonist and his son have experienced such a terrible thing. It can be forgiven for being dazzled for a while, but don't you know how to shout when your girlfriend comes to find someone?
3. The incinerator reopened by itself. As mentioned earlier, the female corpse can manipulate the corpse. I thought the cat corpse was about to come out, but it turned out to be just a pile of smoke.
4. The cause of the cat's death, the cat was covered in blood and was obviously killed by physical attacks, but it died in the ventilation duct. It can be said that the death outside was caused by the corpses (refer to the male protagonist's father in the toilet and The corridor was physically attacked), dying in the pipe is too weird, could it be that the female corpse manipulated the corpse of the mouse to kill the cat?
5. If it's a witch's revenge, it's too random. I feel like I can do it if I catch anyone. Anyway, the father and son of the male protagonist did not show disrespect to the corpse from beginning to end. In the words, the father of the male protagonist even said that they were innocent. It's just that ordinary young girls aren't witches. Although there are no rules for revenge, isn't it a bit too indiscriminate to even support one's own side? If you change the script on this point, you will change the male protagonist and his son to be disrespectful to the corpse, and then agree to the witch-burning incident. Is it more reasonable?
6. What does the true confession of the male protagonist and his son in the elevator mean? Drive the plot to make the male protagonist figure out to return to the autopsy room? It's not necessary. The male protagonist figured out that it's better to go back and hit luck instead of waiting here to die. Why did he suddenly have an affectionate scene?
Points 5-6 are nothing to talk about, but they are pure complaints. The first 4 points can also be explained by hallucinations, but I always feel that the pattern is low. The mysterious feeling created throughout the article is finally brought by the word [illusion]. , It feels like the national fear is so mysterious in the front, but in the end, the protagonist is actually dreaming or mentally ill. . .
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