Symbolism in 'Red Hill' and Duerrenmatt's 'Der Besuch der alten Dame'
I noticed an interesting resemblence between "Red Hill" and Duerrenmatt's "Der Besuch der alten Dame".
In both works, a local who was betrayed in the past returns for revenge, while a panther lurks around the village.
I thought the symbolism worked better in Friedrich's play, maybe they shouldn't have shown the (sloppily animated) panther in Red Hill, or they should have worked on its threatening presence a little more.
Original or not, it did help us wonder: who are the real monsters?
Can monkeys surf the net, and corrupt our kids?
Chimpanzee chatrooms, next on Sick, Sad World.