Shutter Island's content.
Is it Da Vinci's? Leonardo's hero was once a soldier who participated in World War II. He once witnessed all kinds of atrocities committed by Nazi concentration camps against Jews, which can be seen from his memories. He also witnessed that the leader of Nazi concentration camps did not die immediately after shooting himself because of his clumsy suicide. In the movie, the hero watched the dying Nazi leader try to commit suicide with a gun again. He chose to remove the pistol with his feet and let the Nazi leader die an hour after committing suicide. When a Nazi prisoner tried to escape because of nervousness, his team did not hesitate to kill all those Nazi prisoners. What he experienced made him suffer from the so-called post-war mental syndrome, which was characterized by anxiety, anxiety, alcoholism and so on. Specifically, you can look at other materials yourself. Then go back to the movies. In fact, the shooting technique of this film is the same as that of Cry Out on a Island (the one played by Nick Kidman). The hero is actually the most abnormal patient in this mental hospital, because he has an obvious dual personality, the so-called split personality. This personality is divided into two parts. One part is Andrew Ray Tis, who burned down his house and smoked his wife and children to death. The other is Teddy, his imaginary marshal. The cause of the story is that he returned to his hometown after the war, married his wife and gave birth to several children. Because of his strong mental performance after the war, he neglected to take care of his wife and children, which directly led to their unhappy marriage life and led to his wife's mental disorder after taking drugs for a long time. Finally, one day, her wife suddenly became mentally ill and drowned her child. When he came home to witness this scene, due to excessive sadness and great pressure, he ended his wife's fate with a pistol and set his house on fire. This can be seen from the movie. There is a scene where he is holding his wife, and her abdomen is bleeding in a room full of smoke and dust, which is enough to show that his wife was not killed by smoke or fire, but was shot and killed by him. Next, in this mental state, the protagonist has a so-called split personality and is extremely violent. His consciousness is divided into two parts, as mentioned above. He has always stood on his good side, looking for his cruel side. This mental state makes it difficult for him to tell what is truth and what is the truth he is looking for, because he lives in a world created by his own thoughts. There is a simple reason. He can't accept that his wife died under his own gun. Next, he should have been sent to a mental hospital for treatment. As we know, before the 1980s, the general treatment for this mental illness was medication and surgery. Generally speaking, drugs are nothing more than sedatives, and surgery is to remove protein from the forebrain. The general purpose of surgery is to make people lose their memory and intuition. Simply put, it is to become a fool, without a series of emotional consciousness such as pain, happiness and happiness (friends who have seen the movie "Leaping over the madhouse" should understand, but later this operation was abolished because of the lack of basic respect for people). All members of the safety committee in the film agree that the hero should be allowed to have this operation, but the director of his mental hospital and his attending doctor, the imaginary assistant of the hero in the film, are strongly opposed because they try to cure the disease in another way, that is, role-playing, which is often called role-playing. They hope to create a time and space imagined by the protagonist, so that the protagonist can gradually get out of his fantasy and truly realize himself. So the first act of the movie begins, which is called role-playing therapy. In the hero's fantasy, Andrew Laeddis, the concrete reference of the evil side of his personality, went to the hospital on the island of confinement. He gave himself a good reason that the mother who drowned her child ran away from the hospital, so that Teddy, a kind person in his personality, had a reason to go to Shutter Island for investigation. So, he came to Shutter Island with his imaginary assistant Chuck, actually his attending doctor (Lester Shim). It can be seen from his seasickness on the boat that he is very afraid of water subconsciously, because his child was drowned by his wife, and he doesn't drink, because it is precisely because of alcoholism that his family life is not satisfactory, which can be seen from his drinking first when he comes home. After coming to the island, the prison guards on the island are on the verge of an enemy, but the protagonist scoffs at this because he thinks that the arrival of the federal judge will not be like this. In fact, it is not the protagonist himself that the prison guards guard against, because he is a retired soldier and a detective of the FBI. After experiencing a split personality, he has become an extremely violent and dangerous figure. Before entering the hospital gate, there was an attempt to surrender the gun. It can be seen that the protagonist's proficiency in unloading a gun is completely different from that of his assistant, because that person is not a law enforcement officer who can carry a gun, but a doctor, and this so-called goof-off asked his "assistant" to cover up the past by using himself as a civilian. When the hero conducts his imaginary "investigation" in the hospital, he finds that Rachel, the mother who drowned her child, is missing, and leaves a note under the bed that says, according to the fourth rule, who is patient 67? In fact, this is exactly what the protagonist subconsciously pursues. He is the 67th patient. In fact, the answer is very simple, that is, himself. From the paper, it can be seen that his "assistant" later gave him a admission file at the edge of the cliff. His doctor hoped that he could realize this clearly, but the hero himself did not admit it. About the fourth rule, later in the movie, at the lighthouse, the bald dean of the hospital also told him. In fact, those names are rearranged from his name and his wife's name. Rachel, who disappeared in the movie, was actually a nurse who took care of him. Later, he was lying in bed, and the nurse was holding a medicine tray. After that, the hero conducted a series of "investigations" in his world. First of all, the man who cut the face of the nurse who treated his father with glass began. When he asked the patient whether he denied Andrew Ray Tis, the patient was too scared and nervous to speak. In fact, the patient knows the hero and knows his degree of violence, but the hero knows that the other party can't stand the sound of rubbing things with sharp tools. However, he deliberately rubbed his pen on the paper to make a noise to provoke and intimidate the other side, which shows the degree of terror of the hero. As a result, the latter said with anger and fear that those who drowned their children would be executed or even poisoned by poison gas. This sentence deeply stimulated the hero's subconscious, which should be said to be the beginning of his cure. Then he "interrogated" a typical aunt, who may be the most sensible person in a mental hospital except doctors, nurses and guards. She just couldn't stand domestic violence and ended her husband's name. She told the hero that the so-called Rachel imagined every patient in the hospital as her neighbor and gave them a social role, just to make the hero realize that he was the same, but when the hero threw the same question to her about who Andrew Ray Tis was, the kind aunt knew that he was hopeless and estimated that he would have to undergo the operation of removing the brain lobe, so she sent away his attending physician and wrote him a letter on paper. Then there was a plot in the movie. The hero asked the hospital to hold a meeting to discuss the missing Rachel and her attending doctor who came home for vacation. As a result, when he came in nervously, he found that everyone didn't seem to care much. He was very angry and asked why. Everyone thought it was ridiculous. Now that I think about it, a group of normal people are discussing something that didn't happen. Rachel's doctor is actually his assistant. The plot continues to develop. The hero asked the hospital guards to go to the seaside to find Rachel. Therefore, the prison guard had to look for Rachel in order to cooperate with him. When he mentioned why he didn't search the mountain beyond the lighthouse, the guard replied that the road there was not easy and there was going to be a storm soon. Let's talk about it another day. Later movies showed us that he could easily climb down the rock without any climbing tools, and when he found a female doctor who ran away because she was dissatisfied with the hospital's operation on patients, he could know that there was no effort to go there, but the guards thought everything he imagined was false, and there was no Rachel at all. What can he find there? Later, Rachel found out that she was actually a nurse. In the dialogue with the protagonist, she kept talking about the drowning child, killed her spouse with her own hands, and kept asking him "Who are you?" She just wanted to let the protagonist know herself through these stimuli, but she still failed. Later, the hero's doctor, that is, his assistant, just used another means, that is, let him enter the so-called "C area" in his mind. They arranged a scenario of a fake power outage, so that Area C would be like nobody's business, and convinced him that the scenario of hospital power outage could be revealed to him when he asked the hospital to hold a collective meeting. Then, he and his doctor came to the so-called area C, which is a place to take care of the seriously mentally ill and extremely dangerous patients. When they came to Area C, the doctors first arranged for a patient to give him a spiritual hint. The patient told him that he didn't want to leave here because he had been here too long and didn't want to accept the outside world. He doesn't know what a hydrogen bomb is and so on. . . The purpose is to make him realize that he has been living in his own world, thus being isolated from the world. In this case, it doesn't matter. Later, the doctor found an excuse to leave him and asked him to find the college student George Noyce. Imagine what George Noyce would have learned from the outside world if he hadn't told the hero that he had set himself on fire. Later, the hero easily found the latter, in fact, the reason is very simple, because the hero is also a patient living in area C, and he is the most powerful and dangerous one. The dialogue between the protagonist and him is also centered on who Andrew Ray Tis is. The latter has been hinting that he is actually himself, telling him that all this is just a game against him. He is just a mouse in the maze. Unless he realizes the truth and really lets go of the fact that his wife drowned the child and killed his wife, he will never leave here, that is, he will never leave his own world. When he later asked Andrew Ray who Titis was, the latter seemed to point out that it was him, and those injuries on his face were also attributed to the protagonist, because the latter pointed out to his face that he was the Andrew Ray Titis he was looking for. As a result, the protagonist did not believe him, but gave him a good beating. After the failure of this move, the latter can only point all the last clues to the "lighthouse" in the protagonist's heart. It's over. In the lighthouse, the hero met his "assistant" and the dean, who explained the truth to him to the greatest extent, including the combination of those letters, the origin of those photos and his real experience. In this case, the protagonist is furious and even ready to shoot them, only to find that his gun is just a toy. . . . . . Another detail is that there is only one guard in the so-called BT operating room. After disarming, the guard asked him, "Are you going to kill me?" . The ending. After waking up, the hero who walks in his fantasy world finally realizes who he really is and what the truth is, and we also hear our own cognition of the real world from him. All this seems to indicate that he has fully recovered under this treatment. However, the unexpected ending pushed the film to a climax. Early the next morning, his attending physician, that is, his assistant, sat beside him, but he was surprised to hear that the protagonist still called him Chuck or discussed with him the plan to escape from the island. In the eye contact between the doctor and the dean, it can be seen that the doctor thinks that the protagonist's consciousness is still not clear, and their plan should have failed. The so-called plan, as the dean said, is to communicate with patients, try to listen to them, try to communicate with them and help them out of the shadows without surgery. However, these words of the protagonist completely disappointed them, so they had to accept the plan to let him have surgery. Then, when the hero stood up and walked slowly to the guards and hospital staff who were going to take him away, he said a meaningful sentence, "Which will be worse? Live like a monster ... or die like a good man. " "Which is worse? Live like a monster or die like a man. " When his doctor heard this sentence, he actually knew that the hero's illness had completely recovered. However, the hero himself cannot accept this reality. He would rather live in his own world than die in his own world and live with such a heavy ideological burden. So he chose surgery to get rid of his memory, thinking, senses and consciousness, because he didn't want to face it before he recovered, and he couldn't face it after he recovered. His doctor silently respected his choice.