Simply sort out the plot of my personal understanding: Katie is a medical staff, is terminally ill (presumably), and has had an accident, so she converted to God, changed her name to Maud, and later did Amanda's personal care.
Maude is a "pious" believer, and he has continuously sensed the existence and guidance of God (although those are probably hallucinations caused by illness and psychological shadows) and gained the power of faith from it.
But God can't save her either. Without miracles, death will always come, and death always wins over the general.
In the face of death, Maude was alone and helpless. God was her last straw. In the end, she had no other choice but to use the straw to set fire.
Personally, I really like the scene where Maude burned himself on the beach and everyone bowed down. In our age, God has almost lost his majesty. The sacredness no longer exists. Only death still retains the original and permanent shock to us.
ps
①It's a god of casting. The degree of fit between the heroine and the role is close to a miracle.
②I like the shot of the heroine playing with a lighter, and it echoes well in the end.
③A scene of cardiac resuscitation in a certain scene?
④Several fragments of the heroine's self-abuse testing whether she is psychic is desperate. Nothing can save us. The world we live in is such an unreasonable place. Pain is good for self-deception, pain is torturing us, pain is a thorn that does not bloom, and death is an inevitable holiday.
⑤Loneliness is probably also a terminal illness.
View more about Saint Maud reviews