Some things are puzzling, such as the coherence of characters' behavior, and the last episode is even more strange. It seems that the theme of whether monsters and people can coexist or not is just written a story like this, dig too many holes, die too much How many people don't have to die.
But I still think that the male protagonist will not become Fang Yifan (wrong, because the evil of that monster is pure evil, just like the person who bullied him, bullying and killing are just because of randomness like "the weather was good at the time" The reason. And the male protagonist sees and feels the kindness and love that he has never had before in this building, so he will not and will never become the person he hates the most.
The last bit of feeling on the theme is reminiscent of Camus's comment on the work "The Outsider": "In our time, if you don't cry at your mother's funeral, you will be sentenced to death." A group is completely defined, and once a group is greater than an individual, that's when humanity begins to disappear. "Weird, out of place, out of line with ordinary people, monsters" When such so-called "outsiders" are expelled or even put to death for legitimate reasons, who in the crowd knows if they are the next "outsiders" to become monsters?
View more about Sweet Home reviews