The photography, music, and lines are incredibly beautiful. This should be the world in the eyes of a saint. I thought this would be a religious version of Sherlock or House of Cards, telling about the difficulties and challenges that Christianity encountered in the new century, and thus redefining religion; or pulling people in high positions off the altar to prove the hypocrisy of religion. The result is not, in fact, it is still talking about a very old proposition, does God really exist? The director is a true believer, and did not make up for the ugliness shown by religion in this era. In the play, the priests frame each other for power, commit adultery and have children, enslave others to satisfy their own desires, and others. Addicted to alcohol is demoralizing, but amazingly God didn't get rid of it. The director made sarcasm and solemnity wrestle with each other, as if God was saying, I understand all the evils, and I can resolve all the evils. While pulling a group of people off the altar, they were able to shape a true saint. He sailed against the current, really clean and unsullied, and his heart was like a rock. Because the power of faith does not come from the beautiful depiction of heaven, but after witnessing the temptation of the world and realizing that indulgence is so easy and pleasant, and choosing to stand up and declare war on weaknesses to prove the truth, this is the fragile human beings are fighting against themselves. Animal nature, so as to fight for a zone of innocence that cannot be destroyed by desire, where divinity can inhabit, and God exists because of this.
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