That horse, Maximus is so handsome, he is the male protagonist, he is handsome, and he also bears the jokes of the whole play.
The first time I saw the heroine, I fell in love with the heroine, looked at each other affectionately, and was easily tamed.
And when the heroine was in danger, she was brave and resourceful, showed leadership, initiative, leadership, and innovative spirit, and persuaded a bunch of robbers and rogues to rescue the hero, and then led the hero to rescue the heroine! (What kind of chivalrous dedication is this!)
She is also a dog and a horse, willing to serve the princess, and finally retire, the whole show is cute!
In contrast, the male protagonist who is a thief is well behaved, and I can't tell when he fell in love with the female protagonist. Apart from being handsome, there's really nothing else. As he said, "I'm handsome, isn't it also a superpower?" The
witch's role is actually more like a mother, who has done her mother's parenting duties for many years.
Regardless of the matter of maintaining youth forever, I want to keep her rebellious daughter by my side, I don't want her to leave me, I also want her to suffer a little and then run back and cry. This is the mother's state of mind.
When the princess said that she gave up looking at the sky lantern and changed her birthday gift to paint, although the journey was far away, the witch immediately set off to fetch it. Maternal love.
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