Before I watched it, my cognition Li Moses took the Jews out of Egypt to be considered a magnificent epic. After reading it, I felt that Jehovah was not something (Is it sure that it was not taken to demolish the stage?). In a slave society in Egypt at that time, you had to believe in you. Why? People have to realize that they should also humanize slaves. Is that location possible in that era?
The wayward little Pharaoh firmly believes in himself and believes that man will conquer the heavens, and the Lord is angry. All kinds of heavenly punishments come down one after another, bloody water, flooded crops, plagues, locusts... Isn't it the civilians who are the most hurt by this kind of attack? In the end, there was a murder of a child (it seems that there were other weak people), and I endured the previous one, but I spurned the Lord in this film to death.
You said Moses went to admonish Ramses. Is that really a brother admonition? Just keep your child well, how do you keep it? When I went back and told myself how to protect the child, wasn't it clear, but did you tell Ramses? It was cruel that the Egyptians killed all Jewish newborns because of a prophecy. What is the difference between what the Lord did now and what the Egyptians did back then? When the two groups of people confronted each other the next day, let alone the Egyptians shouting murderers of children, I think so... I originally thought that Moses led the Jews to leave as a pilgrimage path. The appearance of people being driven out by dingy? ? (It is still said that the Egyptians also did conscientious things, but those mortals in that place in that era. Is the Lord a bit divinely conscious? He has the ability to directly kill the pharaohs and nobles, so he will fight with the people and children, and really look down on him)
Finally, let me talk about Ramses. This person is a bastard. He didn't kill Moses, and immediately put a sword on Moses. When his mother asked to kill Moses (I don't know if it was his mother), his attitude was also rejected. He was jealous of Moses. He had a subconscious that hoped that Moses would die on the road when he was in exile, but he did not do it himself, which means that he also had the emotion of being a brother of Moses, but what was the first thing Moses did when he came back? He threatened with the sword given by Ramses. The military commander was born with a sword and threatened and cut his skin. I don't believe that there was no killing intent. Ramses was a pharaoh from Egypt. Can it be solved? Did you try it? Do you have to use such an unwelcome way? People also have pride, so why listen to Moses' threats? He didn't like Ramses from the beginning, he ran unpleasantly when he was chewing something in his mouth... But during the plague, he watched his wife suffer with a distressed look, guarded the child's crib, and leaned down several times. The body and the child were whispering (the last time the child was in the coffin), and the wife was also helpless after being driven mad...At least when these natural disasters occurred, people guarded his wife and children as best as they could. At this time, Moses was abandoning his wife and abandoning his wife. Zimou's career... (I'm sure I didn't have hatred with the Jews, I made it in the opposite direction?)
I haven't seen Exodus-related movies and TV works before, and I didn't expect to watch it for the first time... This film was shot, how? Say it? How can I sympathize with the Jews? How can I establish a positive image of Moses? How can I treat Jehovah as a god instead of shooting a murderous machine that is unscrupulous and sympathetic? The epic picture in my heart is destroyed like this/(ㄒoㄒ)/~~ It is the unyielding spirit of the little pharaoh Ramses fighting against people and heaven (to put it simply, this child is too screwed). You can still take a look.
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