When I saw the title of the movie, I thought of another American movie - "Fake Tenjin". In fact it is indeed a remake of the latter. What I remember fresh is the shot of the male protagonist pulling the moon. It can be said that it and "Fake" are both nonsensical comedy films, but they both highlight a theme: God is not omnipotent.
The male protagonist's life, work and love are not smooth everywhere. Whenever he encounters troubles, he complains that God has not fulfilled his wishes. In the end, God gave him the power to become God for ten days, and he used these powers to satisfy himself and everyone's wishes. As a result, things backfired, the world was in chaos, and his lover was hurt. After he repented, he gave up his power and finally won back his career and love by himself.
In life, we often place many desires on God, hoping to help us realize, and sometimes even "make a deal" with God, but forget what the essence of God is. He is both the sum of external force majeure and the sum of inner desires. Needs can be satisfied - without which "people of God" cannot live; but desires cannot be satisfied because "the cravings are insatiable." With limited external resources and unlimited inner desires, conflicts and wars arise when we all want to satisfy our own desires—just like the chaos in the film.
"God is not great; human beings are the greatest. I am in your heart." As a materialist, I firmly believe in the existence of God. But he does not exist in heaven, and the devil does not exist in hell. They all exist in our hearts. God is a perfect person, and when we keep striving for perfection, we become God. To be righteous, willing to help others, to practice the truth, to be self-denying, and to be self-absorbed, this is God. When each of us is not centered on self-desire and has more anger and love, there is not much difference between the world and heaven.
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