Unlimited love

Nola 2022-04-16 08:01:01

Griffith's mother-in-law, this is the part I'm most dissatisfied with in this film.
The two of them are in love with each other, and I have no love for this setting, but I am not against it either.

The aura of the film's battle is too powerful, the action is very real, and the fight is bloody.
I already knew about this manga, but I didn't read the original book because I didn't like the style of the painting.
But when I saw the theatrical version by chance, I was deeply attracted. The combination of 2D and 3D is also good.
Technically, it is impeccable.

In terms of the plot, except for Gus's appearance, which is too old-fashioned, nothing else is sprayed.
Assassination, revenge assassination, Gus's depression gives the film connotation.
After watching the film, I feel that there is a little bit about what it tells, and it is not enough.
Maybe the combined length of the two theatrical versions will be a little more enjoyable.

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Extended Reading
  • Madyson 2022-04-17 09:01:13

    But I clearly remember that in the original book, Griffith said "be mine" to Gus naked after the war and bathing...

  • Lourdes 2022-04-20 09:02:59

    Really exquisite animation, characters and music are good. It's just that the second male is so beautiful and dark-bellied, and he has nothing to say to the pure-blooded male protagonist, "You are my man!" Is he really a man!

Berserk: The Golden Age Arc I - The Egg of the King quotes

  • Griffith: Why do men like to shed blood, you asked. You are right in saying that it is one of the facets we, men, possess. However, it is but a tool to obtain what our heart desires and keep it from harm's way. I believe it to be a double-edged blade.

    Charlotte: What your heart desires... a lover? A knight's honor?

    Griffith: Both are important, aren't they? Fighting and dying for love and honor is what a knight desires above all else. But for men there exists something even more important than that. You know of it, I believe.

    Charlotte: More important?

    Griffith: It is a dream formulated and fostered for your own sake. Men are entranced by their dreams regardless of birth, rank or social standing. The dream supports them. It makes them suffer and it breathes new life into them. And it kills them. Even after they've given up on it, it continues to smolder in their hearts. All men have a dream at least once in their lives. They imagine themselves being martyrs to the God their dream has become. Others live on powerlessly, birthed into the world. I could not endure such a life.