Date: 2010-04-26 10:31 am (UTC)
The modern day murders make more sense in the drama, because you can easily imagine them doing it for no good reason (like, the girl decides to screw up people's lives by planning staged rapes SIMPLY because she doesn't want them to be happier than her).

Essentially, my point is the stupidity you seen in the movie isn't noticeable in the drama, simply because the characters in the drama are so much more evil.

Their crimes make no sense because they're not supposed to.


This sort of came through in th film version as well, but I think my problem with this type of scenario always was, that I though I can understand people being evil, crazy, whatever, I can't understand why anyone won't take elementary precautions against being caught.

I think there were hints in the film that the protagonists were frozen in their "child" state, hence the naivety. But this is kind of odd.

Yeah, they do bury the bodies in the backyard in the drama as well (though it's not her aunt, rather her adoptive mother).

burying bodies in a backyard of a person connected to you = wanting to be caught. I can kind of get it if this is your own house, so you have a full control over it, but in somebody else's house when this someone else is connected to you?

One of my biggest problems with the movie was how innocent they made her look. In the drama, it's actually her, not him whois the villain.

Hmm, I dunno. For me, it became clearly obvious that the girl was the broken one, the one who instigated the murders. the boy didn't even want to murder anyone, he did it because she told him to.

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alexandral

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