Face the tyrannical god in your heart (by the way, this is really the life of the disgusted Ramses)

Flavio 2022-03-22 09:01:43

Hey, I watched it again! What level of insanity is this?

Inexplicably likes the ugly, cruel, greedy, eyeliner pharaoh. He seems to be not the great Osimanders in history at all, but a complete mortal who has been shrouded in the halo of Moses all his life. His love and trust seem to be a little more than his, and secondly, there is not much depiction. The old man used a short dialogue in which the two questioned the priestess together to show the brotherhood of the two, and the priestess remained until the end. In office, it seems to show Moses' dominance in the relationship between the two.

With a shriveled head and a bitter face, he was eating almost every time he appeared on the set, wiping his nosebleed for no reason, and he didn't see any heroic spirit when he was moving forward. It's so weird and awkward that people can't accept it, but when you look at it, it actually feels very real, a kind of reality that can't be expressed in words or words, and the actors are also perfect.

But his stubbornness was no weaker than Moses, and in the end, he held a sword in the huge waves of the Red Sea and rushed to his lifelong brothers and enemies, which just means that he is here! This character is complete.

Compared to Moses, he was really the life of the despised Ramses.

Recently, I have fallen into a strange circle of thinking and cognition: that is, every intentional creation of the creator is his own avatar: Ramses, Yahweh, and Moses can be said to be the only three personalities in this film, plus one Moses' wife at most , also "Sacrificing my faith for your faith"

This woman is no longer as individual as the women in the other films of the old man. It always seems that everyone is awkward or flat, no wonder most people don't like it.

Moses was schizophrenic talking to himself on the wasteland. Moses and Ramses confronted each other with the twin swords of brothers given by the nurturer, and told each other with his wife: Who makes you happy? Finally, having completed the Ten Commandments, the dying Moses finally reconciled with Jehovah, who was still a child.

Who makes you happy?

Of course, it is only you. After all the hardships, the accusing voice in your heart has finally subsided. All the phantoms, the beautiful and beautiful wife of Ramses, Jehovah, who sacrificed his faith for you, are all yourself.

Going back to the film itself, the two leading actors performed wonderfully. Although the special effects and music of the Red Sea show were nothing new, they could give six stars compared to the many empty scenes.

View more about Exodus: Gods and Kings reviews

Extended Reading
  • Linnie 2022-03-23 09:01:49

    Ridley Scott is making a biblical film that makes it difficult for both theists and atheists to get close, right? After watching the inexplicable heat and wanting to drink the Arctic Ocean, the moment I tore the lid, I was suddenly worried that the entire Red Sea would gushing out from it.

  • Raphaelle 2022-04-23 07:01:54

    It is more faithful to the legend of Moses, but the ten disasters are relatively easy to accept. Both atheists and religious people will give the film low marks. Ramses is more tragic, and the part when his son died was more sincere and touching, but the final pursuit became a dog's tail.

Exodus: Gods and Kings quotes

  • Moses: Follow me and you will be free. Stay and you will perish.

  • Moses: Who are you?

    Malak: Who are YOU?

    Moses: I'm a shepherd.

    Malak: I thought you were a general. I need a general.

    Moses: Why?

    Malak: To fight. Why else?

    Moses: Fight who? For what?

    Malak: I think you know. I think you should go and see what's happening to your people now. You won't be at peace until you do. Are they not people in your opinion?

    Moses: Who are you?

    Malak: I am.