Detective, heaven and man are at war. Light and darkness?

Ambrose bierce and Robert Chambers inherited Edgar Allan Poe's thought, inspired Lovecraft's "Cthulhu" myth, and played a key role in American popular terror culture. The tribute of two predecessors, Pizzolato, made the detective more mysterious. Especially for the detective grating played by Matthew McConaughey, whose wife died of his daughter, he always believed in nihilism with no ultimate value. Pizzolato even asked Raster to directly tell mysterious things such as "four-dimensional space" and "thin film theory" through his lines (quantum mechanics is metaphysics for most ordinary people). Raster seems to be a Nietzschean, thinking that "we can't remember our life and we can't change it at all. This is the worst and most mysterious part of fate: you are trapped, and you will walk into the same nightmare again and again. " This is almost the concrete expression of Nietzsche's pessimistic "eternal reincarnation" thought. The protagonist in Cthulhu mythology is often attacked by ancient evil forces and gradually falls into a state of ecstasy, which is also reflected in the grating. For example, when he broke into the altar of Calker Sa cult, a mysterious cosmic starry sky pattern appeared in front of him in a hypnotic way. Raster's last confession is a vivid expression of his mental journey: "For a moment, I knew I was in some kind of darkness ... all of us, the three of us, were slowly disappearing. All I have to do is let go … and then I let go … but I still, I can still feel her love, even stronger than before. Nothing, nothing but love ... and then I woke up. " This passage is almost a true portrayal of an awakened person who was caught by the evil spirit of Cruz and then pulled back from the cliff (it can also be understood that Raster became a believer of another "cult", but gradually awakened in the struggle against the cult that committed crimes in the play).