Answer the hero

Emmie 2022-04-22 07:01:03

First of all, this is a devout believer (at least the hero and heroine must be) that the heroine commits suicide and cannot go to heaven, and then although the girl and boy have been baptized, they actually have a skeptical attitude towards God in their hearts. Girls and boys and old maids are like this A dialogue questioning God (the girl does not believe that God created the world in seven days, the boy said that the pigeon is not holy at all, and always poops on the window sill, so the girl and boy are not devout believers and can’t go to heaven, the three girls, boy and heroine stay aside Prison (our cultural understanding is to wander in the world). The male protagonist is a devout believer who died in the front line (at the end of the film, when the female protagonist was holding two children, the children asked if their father was dead, and the female protagonist had Affirmative account, my father has died in battle, so don’t talk nonsense about the male protagonist’s serious injuries and come back to life) But the obsession with his family keeps the male protagonist from going to heaven, (similar to a ghost who doesn’t reincarnate), wandering in the border prison Go, look for home. In the end, the heroine took him home. The hero saw his wife and children, his obsession was released, and he was forcibly summoned to heaven. Why is there no explanation for the hero to leave in the film, because he explained that he went to heaven and went to heaven , will make the audience question the identity of the heroine's family, which will weaken the effect of the reversal at the end. The article is scribbled, but I think this is the most reasonable explanation for the hero!

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Extended Reading

The Others quotes

  • [repeated line]

    Nicholas: Mummy!

  • Grace: [regarding Lydia] Was she born like that?

    Mrs. Mills: Beg your pardon, ma'am?

    Grace: The girl. Was she born a mute?

    Mrs. Mills: No.

    [looks uncomfortable]

    Mrs. Mills: I think I've finished here, ma'am. If you'll excuse me, I think I'll go and see if Mr. Tuttle needs a hand.