On the surface, the movie tells the story of a clown-shaped demon who has survived for hundreds of years killing children. In fact, it implies childhood violence. The seven protagonists are either orphans or born in loveless families. They encounter clowns as a metaphor for the violence they encounter in their lives, clowns only harm helpless children, and represent incompetent guardians who make children vulnerable and many children die. Adults will not be harmed by clowns, which means that adults will not be threatened with violence. The three bad boys that the seven protagonists encounter from time to time always threaten the protagonists with violence. In fact, they represent the root cause of violence against children. In the middle of the film, seven children are looking for the clown in the sewers. The clown first kills three bad boys, and finally the clown is killed by the protagonist hitting his head with a silver weapon. Magical horror aside, the metaphor here is that 7 children fought back fiercely in the sewers and injured (killed) 3 bad boys, so they did not kill the devil but committed murder, and they swore that no one would take it. Talk about this. After 30 years, the 7 protagonists have all become winners in life, but none of them have children. When Mike informs the other 6 people that the clown is back, they don't have to go to their hometown for this muddy water. The metaphor here is the murder case 30 years ago. It has been revealed that the seven people will eventually be condemned by conscience.
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