"Dracula" explores the origin of Dracula's fear of death. It also shows that Christianity is not associated with vampires. Faith is false, experience is true.
First, the play denies the existence and role of religious belief. In the play, the audience is always misled by the cross to think that it is related to Christianity. But in fact there are some small hints that there is no connection. In the first episode, Agatha reveals that she did not become a nun out of faith. In the play, she is also repeatedly said by others that she does not behave like a nun. Agatha has said she doesn't believe in a real Lord. In the view of the abbot of the monastery, her research tends to be "heretic". Dracula said he feared the cross because of inertia, not rules.
Second, I think there is a bug in this idea. The greatest benefit of being a vampire is immortality, which is a manifestation of fear of death, and finally deduced such an obvious conclusion, isn't it a big circle? It's like, I'm a rich man, and I have money in my world as a pursuit. Suddenly one day, a poor man said that your weakness is that you have money. I tm actually think it makes sense? ?
Tell me about each episode in general.
The first episode is the most brilliant place, very similar to the original. It's a pity that the former "Four Hundred Years of Fright" is dwarfed by it.
With three of my favorite vampire themes, the movie "Four Hundred Years", the movie "Interview with the Vampire", and the German-Austrian drama "Dance of the Vampires".
"Four Hundred Years of Fright": Thinking that being a vampire is worse than being a human being, will be accompanied by this shameful greed and pain. So Dracula refused to turn Mina into a vampire and "killed himself". Dracula's death was forgiven by God, which shows that in this setting, vampires and Christianity are opposites.
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