From the beginning to the end, I always thought that this film should be an epic blockbuster, and it really surprised me at the back.
The two intriguing points of this film are actually one is the witch's motive for killing, and the other is actually an ending that echoes the first one. This point should be seen in conjunction with a central idea that the whole film wants to express, that is, the "faith"
first. The words that the godfather of the Crusaders shouted on the battlefield and the fragments that have been echoed in the male protagonist's mind.
At the end, the witch shouted the same words in the cage, and the mark that appeared on the hilt of the Crusader's sword at the end was not an angel, not a god, but a mark that was exactly the same as the image of the devil in the film. So does it mean that the devil is actually the "God" that has been played in the church?
And what is the "faith" expressed in this film? In fact, the main expression is the male protagonist's pursuit of his own beliefs, including chivalry, or his sentence "I only believe in God, not the church". In fact, the church also alludes to some institutional things in reality.
In general, although the 5-player dungeon is ugly, fast food, business, and the plot is "simple" enough, the overall coherence and the echoes of the beginning and the end are still worth watching.
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