The movie tells a total of three stories, one is the queen begging for a child, the other is the king's lust, and the other is the king marrying a daughter. The first two stories are too dark, or it may be that I read too many stories like this, and I didn't feel much touched. The monster son-in-law of the king in the last story (haha, son-in-law--suddenly reacted to this title as a sinicization. I can't think of a better word for it, so I'll use this first.) It made me indignant. The monster's goal is clear, and after guessing that the answer is lice skin, it insists on taking the princess away. His actions are saying, I am here for you. Other guessers are not so frank. One of them even flirted with the princess - after the eyes were raised, the princess was moved, but who knew whether he liked the princess, wealth or beauty. The days of living in a cave with monsters are indeed not good, and they almost drink blood. The first time the princess entered, there were bones all over the floor, and she was so scared that her face turned pale. This cave is socially distant, far from its former comforts, with only one overbearing monster husband. However, I was moved by the relative goodness of monsters to princesses. He pulled the princess away. When he was on his way, the princess couldn't move. He patted his shoulder and signaled to carry the princess on his back. When climbing the steep cliff, he never let go of the princess. The princess was about to fall, and he was the one who pulled it back. The princess ran away and pushed him off a cliff, and they burned the monster, who killed the others in his rage. But when the princess trembled and hugged him, his anger subsided, he didn't hurt the princess, he controlled his anger and murderous thoughts. So that the princess finally cut off his head to be successful. Relative to the king, the monster is still good for the princess. What I said above is all under a relative condition. In real life, marrying a monster you've never seen is horrible.
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