From birth to the end of life, can a person really live without any sin?
The protagonist of this film is a firefighter who lost his life in a rescue operation, and went to hell with the messenger from hell to face trial, hoping to be reincarnated.
Seven Gates: Murder, Sloth, Deception, Injustice, Betrayal, Violence, Family Relationship
Because the male protagonist has the bonus of being a nobleman, he can avoid the judgment of the two gates of injustice and betrayal. The first two trials also allowed the audience to gradually understand the character of the male protagonist, and gradually created an image of justice for him. But after that, the sudden death of a relative from the real world signed him in the hell world.
Personally, I think this is also the exciting part of the plot of the film. Hell and the real world intersect. The way of two-line narrative, the two parallel worlds are also more watchable, and the singleness is avoided.
The sudden death of the male protagonist's brother and the joint trial of the sixth and seventh levels have brought a lot of difficulties to the male protagonist. The mother finally forgives sincerely, the brother finally forgives, the family finally overcomes hell, and the touching reaches a climax.
The pain of the male protagonist in reality, whether as a teenager or an adult, is heartbreaking. When he was young, his family was poor, his mother was seriously ill, and there was no hope for the family. Because of guilt, he ran away from home. Since then, he has not dared to go home for 17 years. He just tried his best to make money for his mother and brother. This kind of life is not a special case in South Korea. There are still some people in South Korea who are at the bottom and suffer from the hardships of life. Where is their hope?
Sin and sin can be different, seven sins, seven deadly sins. Do people really know how to examine their own sins and faults only after death? As the end credits suggest, you have a chance to make amends while you're alive. The complexity of reality is unimaginable and the situation can be tricky, but have you tried to make up for it?
It is the reality that is escaping, and the heart that asks the guilt.
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