The film reflects on the patriarchal society, but this is only the tip of the iceberg of the film.
I have to say that the screenwriter has a lot of brains. In the film, Jehovah is powerful because he has a computer, not because of the fact that he is Jehovah himself. The movie fictionalizes the role of Iya, the daughter of God. As the sister of Jesus, she went to find 6 apostles. The process of finding the apostles is very similar to the experience of Jesus, but it happened in modern society, and the expression is more dreamy .
There are also many metaphors in it, including the right hand of God, walking on water, the calamity of the Lord, the suggestion of the Holy Grail in the Last Supper, and so on.
In the end, Ijah made a new covenant with mankind, the "Super New Testament Holy Book" as the title of the film refers. It is worth noting that the content of the "Super New Testament" is no longer the words of God, but the perception and thinking of human beings themselves, and it is the words of human beings. There is a very obvious change of subject in this.
Just like the love and tolerance that Christianity proclaims, the movie also emphasizes this, and it is a broader love of transgender, transethnicity, and transspecies.
Interestingly, the film denies a lot of content, including the Trinity itself, but sings some Christian concepts. I don't know what kind of turmoil the creation and release of the film caused in the religious society.
View more about The Brand New Testament reviews