Ending egg of the whole play (with quotation from Claudia's notes by Schopenhauer)

Carmine 2022-10-14 13:43:51

In S3E8, Jonas and Martha returned to Origin World and stopped Tannhaus's son's car. And Tannhaus and his wife looked at each other in the downpour.

The camera freezes, Jonas looks directly at Marek's eyes; Martha stares at Sonja who got out of the car and ran.

In the old world and the new world, photography is echoed by flipping the lens left and right. In the world of origin, Jonas Martha no longer exists. The screenwriter made a joke with us here, echoing the non-existent male and female protagonists with the continuation of the lives of Marek Sonja and his wife. By the way, he also made a gender exchange:

SONJA = JONAS Intertext

MAR ek T ann HA us = MARTHA 's hidden head

In addition, Marek literally means the Slovenian variant of Mars (that is, the Mars god of war in Roman mythology)

The literal translation of Martha's German homophone Marta means "to Mars God of War".

I want to come to the screenwriter because I want to say that the male and female protagonists use a certain connection in the origin world to continue their lives.

Finally, attach the quotation from volume 2 of Schopenhauer's "The World as Will and Appearance" from the diary page torn off by Claudia in the second season.

Rong Hong saw that the entire wetland was filled with countless skeletons, which made people think that it was a battlefield for animals. However, these are all large turtle shells, five feet long, three feet wide, and the same size. These turtles crawled all the way from the sea, just to be able to lay eggs here, and then be swallowed by the wild dogs. The wild dogs gathered together, turned the turtles upside down, tore their belly tortoise shells, and then ate the turtles alive. Tigers often eat wild dogs. All this painful reincarnation has been repeated thousands of times in the long river of time. And because of this, these turtles were born here.
Why do you have to endure the same pain and torture? What is the meaning of this whole horrible scene? The only answer lies in the will to survive, materialized here.

After all, this is a love story.

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