What is never ending? desire!
The male protagonist started taking drugs just to finish the manuscript, but when he found out that he could do more, his heart swelled, and when he wanted more and more things, the drugs would not be enough. So, I thought the movie would end in tragedy.
When a person has seen the vastness of the sky, is he still willing to be the "frog at the bottom of the well"?
When he was almost killed in his own house, he lost his only pill, and could only drink other people's blood to bring himself back to that state, the hero ushered in the most important second turning point in his life ( The first time was exposure to pills), I think this is why the film begins with the male protagonist being forced to commit suicide (tragically ending), and then takes a flashback - the male protagonist is no longer taking drugs for his own desires, the only thing he wants Yes, it is probably freedom. I personally understand what the male protagonist did after escaping from death here. On the surface, he wanted to develop medicines without side effects. threat.
So there is no such thing as a wrong view. In the film, the side effect of the pills is vomiting on the surface, but in fact, people start to lose control of themselves.
All in all, it's a story of a frog eventually turning into a prince.
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