Through the dialogue between the judge and the defense lawyer, the audience can clearly understand that this is the hearing scene. Judges, prosecutors, prosecution and defense attorneys are retrial in the case of McCann Reeve, who, in fact, will be executed within 24 hours. However, McCann Reeve did not appear at the scene.
Grey Lennon can't help but guess, is the movie a parallel timeline? It was McCann Reeve who killed Caroline just now! Or, the flashback method, the one named Robert was actually when McCann Reeve was young? Grey Lennon's thoughts represent the thoughts of the majority of the audience, and everyone is speculating about what is the relationship between the two lines currently appearing in the movie, and who is the murderer who killed Caroline.
The camera does return to the motel. Caroline's death and Robert's escape made the remaining eight adults trapped here restless and on the verge of collapse. Larry hates prostitutes, so he desperately targets Paris, while Ginny starts to become unstable.
Rhodes confirmed that Robert was a suspect in multiple homicides, raising the possibility that Robert was the one who killed Caroline. After gathering everyone together, Ed and Rhodes began to search for Robert in the pouring rain. After all, the traffic and communication here were blocked, and Robert should not be far away.
In the room, the emotionally unstable Ginny finally broke down. She and Louis got married nine hours ago in Las Vegas because Ginny was pregnant. A collapsed Ginny left the room and rushed back to her room. In a fit of rage, Ginny told Louis that she was not pregnant, and that she lied only because her friend told her that Louis was going to the ballroom with other women. After speaking, Ginny timidly hid in the bathroom.
Ed and Rhodes, who were searching for Robert, found strange clues in the hotel, which seemed to be showing, and secrets were hidden here. At the same time, Louis, who was wronged, slammed on the bathroom door frantically in a fit of rage. The almost smashed door panel sternly provoked Ginny's sensitive nerves, and also made the audience in the movie theater nervous. pole.
In a quiet movie, only the sound of thunder and the breathing of the audience around them could be heard. Everyone involuntarily slowed down the rhythm of their breathing, fearing that if they were a little louder, it would break the atmosphere of the scene, and then they would be overwhelmed by the tension. submerged.
Suddenly, the world was quiet, and Louis stopped beating on the door, only the sound of heavy rain rustling outside the window. Ginny timidly and hesitantly pulled open the latch of the bathroom door. The bathroom door opened slowly, but Ginny saw a shadow with a raised sickle. The fear of death made her quickly close the bathroom door, but the huge force outside grabbed the door desperately, and Ginny used all her strength to shout, "Help, help..." She exhausted her last strength and put the The latch was closed again, then the bathroom window was opened, and he quickly fled out.
Hearing Ginny's cry for help, Ed and Rhodes quickly chased after him, but they only saw Louis lying in a pool of blood in the hotel room. This is the second victim. Who is the murderer?
At this moment, the missing prisoner Robert reappeared, running in the rainstorm desert. After running for a long distance, he finally saw a house. Robert broke into the door in a hurry. After leaving, through the large glass in the house, he saw a familiar sign, which was the motel he had just escaped from. "What are you doing!" After a long circle, he actually looked like a ghost Like hitting the wall, he returned to the motel.
Rhodes and Ed stepped forward and beat Robert hard, then tied the semi-conscious Robert to a chair that served as a warehouse, leaving Larry as a guard. When Alice woke up, Robert, who woke up, found that Larry was uneasy and kept running back and forth in front of the freezer. Robert said something seemingly casual, "What? What are you hiding in the fridge?" Larry yelled nervously, "Shut up!"
At this time, the audience was confused. Robert came to this hotel for the first time. Why did he know the weirdness in the hotel? And it made Larry nervous when he said it casually? So what secrets does Larry have, from the beginning, Larry seems to be hiding something, and what does Larry have to do with the murder that just happened?
Paris left the room where George, Alice, Timsey, and Ginny were, and returned to her room. She took out two bundles of the hidden cash and put them in her carry-on backpack, but she didn't want to be prepared. Ed, who was taking photos for evidence, ran into him.
Paris noticed that Ed was very sensitive to turtle hair, so she asked casually, "What month were you born?"
"May," Ed replied.
"Taurus, like me." Paris and Ed chatted. After a conversation, Paris discovered that Ed had left his profession because he was unable to prevent a woman from committing suicide. Out of self-blame, he chose to take sick leave and take long-term sick leave.
During the chat, Ed took pictures of the murder scene of Louis, and it turned out that there was actually a key to room "9" hidden in Louis's arms, while the room where Louis lived was No. 6, and the key was obviously not Louis's own. This seems to indicate that the murderer is counting down the kills. Ed and Louis saw Larry in the corridor. Instead of guarding Robert in the warehouse, Larry went to the opposite room and was busy with something, and came out with an iron box.
Ed called Larry over and asked about the key, but Rhodes, who followed, found that Robert had been murdered, and a huge baseball bat went straight down from his mouth. The baseball bat belonged to Larry, and the keychain for room "8" was left at Robert's feet.
Enraged, Rhodes and Ed began to question Larry. The real murderer appears not to be Robert, but Larry. The tin box in Larry's hand fell to the ground, and Ed found Caroline's purse inside. At this time, George also appeared at the door of the warehouse, and Timsy also ran over together. Larry, who was cornered on the road, stepped back and looked for an opportunity. He grabbed Paris standing next to him and put the knife on Paris' neck.
Paris, who was cornered, began a dying struggle, and she fell to the ground with Larry. Paris struggled to get up, grabbed the handle of the refrigerator and pulled it, trying to use her strength to stand up, but she opened the refrigerator when she didn't want to. A corpse fell inside, which further confirmed Larry's suspicion of murder. After all, Larry was the manager of the motel, and there was a corpse that had been frozen for a long time in the hotel. Could it be that Larry is a hotel murderer? Seeing the corpse fall, Paris' panic throws the scene into chaos, while Larry takes the opportunity to escape through the side door.
Larry ran into the garage, started the truck, and was about to run away, but at this moment Timshy jumped into the middle of the road. In order to save Timsey, George rushed out and took the child back, but he was hit by Larry's truck right on the front of the car, and then the car crashed into the wall. George became the fourth victim.
This may seem like an accident, but was Larry the one who killed the previous three?
Before Grey Lennon could even catch his breath, the scene shifted to the hearing again. Defense attorneys said McCann-Rive's diary indicated that he had a split personality. Doctors say he has no cure for the disease, but integration is possible. At this time, McCann Reeve finally arrived at the hearing. This white fat bald head is obviously not anyone who appeared in the motel. So what's up with that motel line, and who's the killer? What does the motel have to do with the hearing line? The further the film progresses, the more confused Grey Lennon gets.
Ed tied Larry to a chair and seemed to believe he was the murderer. In desperation, Larry can only explain that after he lost everything in Las Vegas a few months ago, he passed by and found the hotel manager dead on the counter. In order to survive, he put the manager's body in the refrigerator. , and he replaced the manager's position and became the manager of the motel.
But this story, Rhodes does not want to believe, he thinks Larry is the murderer. Ed and Paris think Larry's story might be true. In this case, Rhodes lost his mind and waved the gun in his hand to force everyone to stay in the room.
Everyone fell silent in the room, and Timsy walked into the room, where his mother Alice, who had been lying in bed because of the car accident, was inside. When Ginny saw that the child was gone, she started to discuss, maybe everyone gathered here, and then people began to die one by one. It is not a coincidence, it must be because they have something in common Under the mutual communication and temptation, everyone Only to find out that Larry and his most hated prostitute, Paris, are actually from the same place, the town next door. Paris will choose to go back to the town, just to buy an orchard and live a dull and happy life.
At this moment, Rhodes found that Alice, who was lying in the inner room, had stopped breathing, and there was a key to Room "6" beside her. This means that Alice's death is the same as the previous four. But the problem is that Alice died because she was not properly treated after the car accident. However, Larry, who is believed to be the murderer, was tied to a chair again, and everyone gathered together, and there was no time to act. Thinking about it, George also crashed into the front of Larry's car because he rushed out by himself, and died unexpectedly.
Could it be that the death of George and Alice was an accident, not a murder?
However, Paris found out that Robert was holding the number seven key, and the one next to Alice was the number six key, so what about the number seven?
Not surprisingly, Ed and Rhodes found the key to room "7" on George's body.
Things started to get weird. A series of room keys, all implying murder. However, the deaths of George and Alice seem to be accidental, and Larry, who is believed to be the murderer, was tied to a chair when Alice died, and it all became chaotic and confusing. .