When I saw that my wedding was just an excuse arranged by my mother to eliminate Protestantism, when I saw that the Protestants who came to attend the wedding died tragically, blood was flowing in the palace and on the streets. Margo was outraged. She blamed her mother for ruling a country riddled with corpses as a disgrace, and she did not hesitate to lend a hand to the Protestants. And so she started walking towards Henry, but not for love, but for sympathy, the kind nature of women who always stood on the side of the weak. She continued to help Henry while continuing to date her lover. Henry knew that Margo didn't love him, but he always planned to take her away and leave the country that was killing at this moment. From the first refusal to the end, Margo couldn't help but leave, which is really embarrassing. In such an era, a royal family has to compromise, give up the pursuit of love, and long for a safe place to live, showing peace and how humanitarian a rational system is.
Compared with Margo's kindness, her mother seems to be heinous. A mother so eccentric to tolerate the murder of one son by another? A pair of mother and daughter, they are the opposite of good and evil, the concentration of beauty and ugliness. In this way, the good is better, and the evil is more manifested. This is another attraction of the film.
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