Aaron Boone is very troubled. He has gruesomely bizarre dreams that he discusses with his psychiatrist, Dr. Decker. Decker (played brilliantly in my mind by director David Cronenberg) convinces Boone that his dreams aren't dreams, they're memories of murders Boone has committed. He shows Boone some crime scene pictures he lifted off the police connecting the dots between bloody points before prescribing Boone some pills to help him rest.
Boone reacts badly to the prescription, trips balls, wishes he wasn't estranged from his girlfriend and tosses himself in front of a semi. He wakes in the hospital where another patient hounds him, begs Boone to take him to Midian. Midian. That's a name from my dreams, Boone thinks, but before he can ponder any further, the patient takes some hooks and rips his own face off.
Boone escapes the hospital, heads out of town, looking for Midian. And he finds it.
Boone reacts badly to the prescription, trips balls, wishes he wasn't estranged from his girlfriend and tosses himself in front of a semi. He wakes in the hospital where another patient hounds him, begs Boone to take him to Midian. Midian. That's a name from my dreams, Boone thinks, but before he can ponder any further, the patient takes some hooks and rips his own face off.
Boone escapes the hospital, heads out of town, looking for Midian. And he finds it.
- 3/12/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
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