I am sure there is no audience who has not been surprised after watching this film. The director is very bold and the R-rated images fill the whole film. The hand-held camera and the absence of filters have greatly restored the life of Mexican life. The words such as decadence, pain, eroticism, depression, disorientation, and numbness are used throughout the film. And, just when you think this is this film about the character growth of an unknown director, it's not. You can't imagine where the director will stretch the story in the next second, and it's a very, very absurd satire of reality that completely misses the direction of the plot and the trajectory of the characters' behaviour. The film is about an unknown director who is pushed to the edge of his life and falls to his death in an accident. The maid who witnesses and participates in the accident decides to hide the truth of the accident and creates a false impression to deceive the people around him, but in the end, she can't bear the burden of her own spirit so that she confesses to her own crime and gets her own redemption.
The movie shifts from a no-holds-barred sex comedy to a crime drama, drawing out the dangers and existential crises of the proliferation of social media while shifting the focus to the grim issue of class level, the inability of the middle class and the working class to understand each other. Some people seek it, some people hide it, you search desperately for the truth, and in the end no one cares about the truth. Obviously, even without the maid's final confession, the audience won't blame the maid for falsifying evidence and confusing the public, and when the plea 'Sir, please don't fire me' happens, everyone will know that the story won't be the same as the one that started with 'gay equality'. 'love redemption', more, we go back to think about "why the police have no confidence in taking the maid's testimony" 'why the maid's emergency behaviour is justified. 'and why the unseen people, those of lower status, our elders, are unable to make more rational decisions.
In the end, it's not just the corpse in the sun that rots, it's the society that is riddled with holes.