2011-11-28 18:31:32 From: He
Qiude Jude Published on 2010-03-01 16:55
Immortality is a pursuit...
The story of "Goddess Trap" begins Yu Sun God (Birdhead) is about to lose his freedom, or even his immortality.
In Nordic mythology, the gods are all mortal, and all have the so-called "Twilight of the Gods". Here, although the Egyptian gods appear on the scene, they are talking about the same proposition: immortality.
If the immortality is lost, then the next-level choice is to pass on, and pass on the traces of existence. The way of keeping it can be to have a child (to pass genes) or to build a beautiful tower (pyramid). Now that the tower has been covered, let's have a baby.
God’s intuition tells the bird head that there is a woman it needs on earth, a woman who can give birth to God. So it came to the earth, riding on the pyramids.
This earth is not the earth we are familiar with, because it is science fiction, and because the time is already 2095 AD. Humans and non-humans coexist on the earth, but it is clear that humans are dominant, and non-human quasi-citizens are obtained in a struggle. This struggle is somewhat attributed to Nick Poller, who happens to be the hero of the movie. The spirit of Nick Poller is probably a struggle for freedom.
The heroine is non-human, a woman who can give birth to God, her name is Jill.
The place where the movie shines is not the plot, not the story, but the world view, the entire overhead structure, and the possibility that can be expanded, probably similar to the possibility of "Matrix", and of course there are beautiful heroines, pale Face and blue hair, exotic style.
In addition, the poetry in the protagonist's mouth also has a different kind of charm. It seems so out of place and incapable of dismissing under the gloomy, indifferent, absurd, decadent, and decadent industrial civilization and post-industrial civilization.
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