1. About the cannibalism of the cat and the rotten Anubis
At first, I thought that the cat monster is a super invincible big mouse. . .
The film said that the cat and cat monsters survived by killing each other and eating each other. Although it is not very scientific, energy is not conserved, but after all, it seems that cannon fodder often enters to die, or it will prey on small foreign animals at night, so it is not too big. problem.
The cat monster and Anubis tore each other are not to protect the heroine, but to snatch the heroine. Anubis wants his heart, and the Cat Monster wants food.
As for whether the dog's head is Anubis, the film said yes, that is, after all, it is a mythical creature, and the director said it was what it was. And the film also mentioned that it was just a rotten Anubis, so his temperament changed? Decline in appearance? Lower IQ? Changes in eating habits (heart-eating behavior) are also acceptable.
ps should be Amit's legendary creature in the Book of the Dead to be responsible for eating the heart. (Amit swallowed the impure heart, and some say he swallowed the whole impure person so that he could not reach Yalu)
Although I personally can't accept that it is my male god, but since the film says so, it can't be helped.
2. About mold
I saw that there were people who questioned the existence of mold in the place where the pyramid is full of sand. . . The mold part is actually no problem. The presence of mold was detected when many pyramids were opened, and generally there is a thousand-year-old mummy in the pyramid, which is the source of nutrition for mold. Besides, there are so many animals and corpses, so the amount of mold is normal, and the black fog in the play is just an exaggeration. In addition, mold is not only green, black, yellow, gray and white are actually more common.
But there are some things I don't understand:
First, since the three-sided pyramid is not a mausoleum, whose sarcophagus is in the bottom tomb?
Second, why is there a star map?
Third, if the pyramid is Anubis' prison, wouldn't he, who is so familiar with the exits of the prison's various organs, come and go freely?
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