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A unique drug experiment in the movie Spider's Head

author:Leader of the Iron Sword Gang

Spider Head is starring Chris Hemsworth and co-starring Miles Teller and Junie Smollett, based on a short story by George Sanders. A unique drug trial appears in the film, which makes people shudder.

A unique drug experiment in the movie Spider's Head

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The forward-thinking Steve Ainasti (Chris Hemsworth) experiments with the latest drugs in a prison by the water's edge, and dignitaries wear electronic injection devices. The prisoners are all prisoners, living in a prison that is more like a simple laboratory, no cell, no orange prison clothes, but a bar, snacks. Steve Anasti and his assistant Mark tried to inject prisoners with doses of mind-altering drugs hidden in an electronic device worn by the prisoners that was surgically connected to the body, and could be injected at any time, controlling the dose so that Steve and Mark could observe and record the drug properties at any time.

In the beginning, it was controllable, and the prisoners could adapt. Jeff was the main subject of the test, once went to jail for driving drunk, hitting a tree, and killing his companion. He was assigned to a snack group, partnered with Liz, who was good at snacking. Jeff often experiments with new drugs and goes out into the wild to see the changes. He was also taken into the lab to do emotional experiments with different women. It's actually sex with different women. Steve and Mark watched his every move in the observation room, recording the medicinal properties. It wasn't until Jeff and the strong man sat in the same lab that he developed disgusting thoughts. Steve pulled him into the observation room and asked him to inject two women in the lab with a gloomy dose. He chose Sulla, and later said no one wanted to. However, Heather, who was with Sulla, was injected with a gloomy agent, and the whole person went crazy, and even if the depression agent was withdrawn, it did not work. Heather dropped everything around him that could be dropped, and committed suicide with a piece of porcelain.

Steve and Mark rush over, but drop the key to the drawer that holds the lab notes. Jeff sneaked open the drawer, looked at the list of various experimental drugs, and seemed to understand something. It turned out that Steve was a member of Theinasti Pharmaceuticals and was carrying an electronic injection device on himself. Jeff saw in the observation room that Lizzie had been injected with a gloomy agent, and she was afraid of a stapler, thinking that it was what she was most afraid of. Steve knew that this depressant would cause Lizzie's mental problems, but he still insisted on injecting and insisted on observing for a long time.

A unique drug experiment in the movie Spider's Head

Jeff and Liz talk and feel sorry for each other together. Jeff recalls again that he had crashed, not killing his companion and emma, the woman in the back seat. Emma remained conscious after the crash, only when Jeff pulled her away from the vehicle when the vehicle exploded, burning her alive.

Steve observes Jeff's electronic paintings of Liz's head. However, Jeff already knew something, and when Mark went to his room to change his dressing, he told him the truth about Steve's control of The Anatis Pharmaceuticals. Steve invites Jeff into the observation room to inject Lizzie with the remaining depressant and asks for Jeff's opinion, but Jeff disagrees.

Steve gets a little angry and asks Lizzie to tell Jeff what crime she came in for. When Steve reads Liz's profile, Liz says she knows who she is. She forgot her daughter in the car while shopping, and the child died, which was equivalent to killing her nine-month-old daughter. She just wanted to end the trial early and ask Steve to inject her.

Jeff took the controller in his hand, slid the progress bar, and injected her with a scorching agent, while Liz did not change anything, and Steve became extremely frightened. It turned out that Jeff was holding Steve's controller, which was equivalent to injecting him with scorch agent. Jeff injected him with another dose of gloom, and it turned out that Mark had added more to Steve's electronic syringe. Jeff took out Steve's notebook and began interrogating him. It turns out that all drugs are designed to test B-6 drugs, that is, to make people obey orders. Jeff couldn't ask Steve the name of the drug, so he reduced the depression agent and injected him with B-6 agents. The potion immediately came into effect, and Steve said the name of the drug, called "slave agent", and the goal was not just obedience, but absolute obedience. People who have been injected with B-6 potions can absolutely obey orders and even kill people.

A unique drug experiment in the movie Spider's Head

Jeff asks Steve to make public what he did to Heather, but Steve says he will go to jail after doing so. Jeff was leaving, and Steve threatened him with a knife. Jeff asks Steve to give him the knife, but this time the B-6 doesn't work. Steve grabbed the controller and injected Lizzie with all the depressants. Jeff and Steve wrestle and watch As Liz fights herself in the lab, she's going to kill herself with a belt.

Enraged, Jeff picked up the knife, ran to the lab, unbuckled his belt, eased Lizzie's breath, opened Lizzie's syringe again, and pulled out all the injections inside. They fled together, and Steve used the radio to tell all the prisoners to come out and stop them from escaping.

Steve's syringe breaks down during a fight with Jeff and is dysfunctional. In a panic, he took all the injections with him. However, he ran to the seaplane stop, got on the plane, and successfully took off, but he could not stop the side effects of the drug disorder in his body and crashed into the mountain. Jeff and Liz flee in a motorboat, and the experimenter Mark comes to clear the scene with the marine police.

Jeff achieves his redemption, rescues Liz, and "treats his body the way he treats" and punishes Steve, the initiator.

A unique drug experiment in the movie Spider's Head

The film seems to be somewhat idealistic, but the obedient drug does not exist, and it is true that careerists want to have it.

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