Atypical horror drama

Shania 2021-12-25 08:01:18

There is a key setting in Stephen King's "The Clown": The clown will become the thing you fear the most to scare you. What you fear is what you are avoiding.

On this basis, "Ghost Manor" goes one step further.

What you fear is what you are evading, and what you are madly pursuing.

There are countless examples of this in reality.

We are always willing to use "love" as an excuse, but in the end it ends in tragedy,

"Love" is a bad word.

Because too many people use "love" to hide the appearance of being possessed by ghosts.

True love is accepting frankly. Although one day you will suffer pain when you lose your loved one, it is still worth working hard to love.

View more about The Haunting of Bly Manor reviews

Extended Reading
  • Johan 2022-04-23 07:03:00

    I don't know but it doesn't feel great either. What is "The Screw Tightening" about?

  • Jordyn 2022-03-26 09:01:08

    The play has dropped a notch in all directions. Yes, the ending is all summed up. It is not a ghost story, but a love story. It also uses the shell of family affection or love to talk about horror themes, but "Ghost Invasion" can write fear into the changes and relationships of characters, and the disintegration of the family and the degree of terror go hand in hand. And "Ghost Manor" is pulled away. The inspiration that once made full use of the temporal non-linearity in the house has also disappeared-scene transitions, spooky routines, etc. No matter how wonderful the front is, it can't equal the last beautiful beauty and love story, beg for a special story!