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Fall in love with captor syndrome
Fall in love with captor syndrome








fall in love with captor syndrome

It's a simple story of connection, with a sprinkling of fantasy, reminding us that perhaps all we want from life is someone who understands us, even without words. There’s a reason many movies have the theme of women falling in love with their male kidnappers. The Stockholm syndrome refers to stress-induced alteration of the hostages behavior such that the hostage aligns with the hostage taker. The captor is in a dominant position in the capture-captured interaction. The painting-like visuals, simplicity of interactions between the cross-species pair and depth of emotions rise like a tide, and all you're watching is a love story-the fact that a woman is in love with a not-so human creature, hardly relevant. Stockholm Syndrome is an intriguing psychological phenomenon in which hostages develop positive feelings for their captors during captivity. Breakout hit of 2017, Guillermo del Toro's sublime Oscar-nominated The Shape of Water features a mute employee at a high-security government facility who discovers a humanoid-amphibian creature-what follows is a breathtaking lesson in storytelling, as the characters cross paths, and gently fall in love. Perhaps they're trying to remind us it's what is on the inside that truly matters-or they're simply mocking the seeming lack of good men. Stockholm Syndrome is recognised as a psychological phenomenon whereby hostages identify and ally with their captors.










Fall in love with captor syndrome