You may not know the monster that Fantersin chased for the first time. This scene isn't just for Van Helsing to be handsome. "The string case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. hyde" is a very influential novel, which seems to be translated as "Transformed Doctor" in Chinese, in which Dr. Jekyll, being a man of honor, could not stand his own evil desires for moral or reputation reasons, and could not control it, he invented a drug that could transform himself into a completely different person. people, Mr. Hyde, to vent his evil desires and comfort himself with nothing to do with him. But in the end he was finally taken by Mr. Hyde control, until Mr. Hyde died together when he committed suicide.
The struggle between good and evil in one person is deeply drawn from here.
In the film Mr. Hyde is exaggerated into a monster, and the Holy Order still holds out hope that another part of it can be saved. Van Helsing said he would rather kill him happily, and Van Helsing was strict at this time. But when he watched him die in Jekyll's image, he finally took pity on him. Later he said the same to the bishop.
In the eyes of Christians at that time, God was strict, and they believed that the contract with God must be strictly fulfilled, so they were worried about the fate of the family members, even though Christian teaching said that everyone was not at fault for their parents and grandparents, even though Christian teaching said that God is kind. Therefore, people think that once they become a werewolf, even the kindhearted will end up in hell.
So Van Helsing complained, why doesn't God do his work himself.
In Christianity, life is only a fleeting moment, and death is just a door. Anyone who insists on refusing to die is a doctrine of unbelief in God and blasphemy. In the film, Yiguo is afraid of death and sells everything at the price of death; the Count resists God and refuses to die; Frankenstein also has a weak side, but does not hurt others. And Anna was never afraid of death, she said over and over again, I will see them again. In the last scene, Anna peacefully ascends to heaven, and Van Helsing has been calm since then. The subsidence of this last crisis also seems to be reminiscent of the story of Abraham who sacrificed his son, and after a trial, declared that God was merciful.
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