The first time: I killed my sister and I became poor.
The second time: I killed Lonnie and Vicky, and I didn't even have a house.
The third time: poorer, and didn't see anything, why does he always appear late every time he arrives?
When Lonnie identified Sam as the murderer, he really thought that it was because of multiple crossings and various coincidences that led Sam to kill Rebecca, but it turned out not to be, why did Lonnie talk nonsense?
Unwilling to be a bystander, another person dies, changing his own destiny and seemingly triggering a series of murders. Time travel has become easier, but the resulting changes are more complicated. It 's more like a suspense drama.
When his sister said that Goldberg was misleading him, because Goldberg didn't agree with him entering the earliest moments to observe Rebecca's death, I really suspected that Goldberg was designing to frame him and let him. He gradually became a murderer, the disappearance of Goldberg, and the flowers that Goldberg planted at home, all pointed the finger at Goldberg. It wasn't until the end that he faintly felt that his sister did it, but he didn't guess that it was his sister who killed him, and he didn't guess the reason for his sister's murder (really bloody), only that it seemed that his sister was misleading step by step He made him the murderer, suspecting at the time that he had killed his parents, for which his sister hated him.
However, it seems to be an endless loop in the end. If his sister died because she was pulling the door outside, then what happened to him going back to save his sister for the first time? In the most primitive state, his sister should be herself If you can come out, then it seems that only you have an explanation. His sister knew that he was going to travel back to when the fire was on, so she followed him back.
What does this last shot mean?
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