By the way, let's spit out the male protagonist Baker, who is dressed in ancient Greece. Seriously, it's really messy.
heroine? Hathor is a bright spot, but I always feel that the shaping has failed and I can't complain. First of all, I do not know if ancient Egypt had a tradition of prostitutes that spread throughout the ancient world. But after consulting the information, it is almost inseparable that Hathor is the god of love and Bacchus. She has the same functions as the goddess of Wushan in China, Abusaura in India (represented as Yuripashi), and Ishtar in Babylon. However, the ancient world view believes that women's fertility can be passed on to plants, not the dazed image created in the movie, and she also has a motherly character, which is really inexplicable.
Can Zaya in this movie be considered a female number one? She was in the abyss the whole time and then Baek rescued her and then the story ended and she didn't do anything.
When Zaya and Baek were dodging arrows in the chariot, I thought of the Rigveda goddess, who was not reprimanded, but had little power, like the shadow of a male god. And the bold rendering of desire in this film is very similar to the human society at that time.
In the end, the goddess Isis was hacked by the director.
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