loatin…horror territory, and my son agreed, noting, in particular, the car journey prior to the denouement. “At first, you’re on Mills’s side, pleased the killer is caught, and comfortable calling him insane,’ my son said. “But as the scene carries on, and John Doe starts saying his victims weren’t innocent, it gets really disturbing. You start to see his point, even if you don’t think they should have been killed, because some of his victims were horrible people like paedophiles. Then you hate him even more, because it’s like he’s won an argument with you, rather than with Mills. And like Mills, you’re not gloating at him anymore, but wanting him to shut up.”