I just saw this old movie this year.
I like God's farewell speech at the end of the play: God said: " I am everywhere , like the rain moistening the earth , sometimes building a nest with the birds, and sometimes having lunch with the ants under your feet." Poetic language, because the film positions this god as Bhagavad (the only supreme master of the universe) in "Bhagavad-gita (Sanskrit: Song of God)", isn't it familiar?
Through this film, we also heard the language of poetry.
The metaphor of Kanji as Arjuna in the play requires an understanding of the religious background. In the Bhagavad-gita, Krishna, the incarnation of God, drives to the battlefield for the warrior Arjuna as a driver. It was never mentioned in the film. It will be more difficult for Chinese audiences to understand.
Bhagavan (God) frequently turns the keychain on his finger in the film. This is a metaphor for him being the incarnation of Visnu, one of Bhagavan's godheads. Four-handed portrait of Vesinus, one of which holds the Wheel of Wonderful View.
There are hundreds of religions in India, and the violent conflict between Muslims and Hindus for many years is appalling.
The film is actually the director who wants to convey a kind of thought. In fact, they all believe in the same God. Why do they kill each other in the name of God?
In fact, the director of the film also proposed an idea, which is to use the monotheism of the Hindu holy book "Bhagavad Gita" to unify Hinduism with Islam and Christianity.
Abolish the original idol worship in Hinduism, the three religions are unified, and only worship the only God that is omnipresent. "Muslims call me Allah, Christians call me God", in fact, the core idea of the film has been conveyed very clearly.
After so many years of religious vendettas, young people cannot bond because they were born in families of different religious beliefs. There have been many reports in India that Hindus and Muslim men and women fell in love, and committed suicide because they could not get the permission of the family and the surrounding society.
Because of such a tragedy, I really appreciate the director's ability to express the idea of the unity of the three religions in this form. I think this film can be released in India, and it also reflects the Indian people's love for living in God's life. Not a strong desire in the midst of religious hatred.
Due to the fall of the Tower of Babel, human languages are confused, and people in different regions just worship God in different ways. Is this worth fighting for? Is this a religious controversy or a conflict of interest?
The two crusades of the Roman church were actually all wars of economic plunder in the name of the same god.
There has been too much killing and hatred in the world, and as the people of God, they have not learned to respect others, including respect for atheists. This is sad, the director has pointed out the direction, but the real religious unity in India needs an opportunity. If there is a god, please let him be born again, "Mahabharata"!
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