I always felt that vampires, werewolves, witches, Van Helsing, etc., must find time to concentrate on tutoring. They are definitely the exciting existences of the same era in the system. In this series, I am very pleased that "Little Red Riding Hood" can be attributed to it~~
If there are beauties in novels, stories and movies, there must be love (unless the handsome female pig's feet can be heroes of the era and complete the legend of immortal idols)! It's like who said "if a pistol appears in a novel, it must be fired".
After becoming an adult and getting old, I also thought about stories like "Little Red Riding Hood" where courage, wisdom and horror elements coexist. At that time, I thought that the hunter must be the male protagonist, and there was an epic love with Little Red Riding Hood. As for the position of the wolf, I didn't think of a suitable foothold point. After reading this, I suddenly realized that Little Red Riding Hood should be included in the werewolf system. But in the middle of watching the film, I was always worried that the werewolf might not be her grandmother. . . . In fact, her father is still very bloody.
The whole movie scene is beautiful, and that's how fairy tales should be, even evil ones.
The bishop played by Gray Oldman is superfluous, and it feels like the elements are piled up for no reason. Oldman is completely repeating his old career. I also hate that part of all kinds of suspicion. It should go back to the story itself, the focus should be the appearance of the handsome dead hunter + Little Red Riding Hood and the werewolf being careful and afraid + Little Red Riding Hood and the hunter use perfect strategies and sparks of love ❤
But my own concept is completely unclear, and I will guide others not yet fight. . .
Finally, think back to what other dark fairy tales are there? "Pan's Labyrinth", "Zombie Bride" and "Edward Scissorhands" (this is a bit weak), I think the cause of "One Thousand and One Nights" is also quite evil, extramarital affairs, wedding night killing the bride or something. . . .
PS inserts something completely unrelated: it turns out that Voldemort is a Nazi officer in "Schindler's List"! !
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