Heading to Hell': An absorbing and sinister series from the director of 'Train to Busan' for Netflix that presents an exhilarating conundrum

 I suspect that 'The Squid Game' will be mentioned a lot to try to draw attention to 'Heading to Hell' , a series from the director of 'Train to Busan' for Netflix that arrived on the platform this Friday, November 19. I myself fell into temptation when I told you about the appearance of its trailer, but the truth is that there are few points in common between the two beyond the fact that both come to us from Korea.


'Heading to Hell' presents a society in which the appearance of mysterious creatures ends with the death of a person and the promise that something like this will happen again. From there we find an absorbing series with a sinister point that offers a varied and satisfactory portrait of everything that arises around this strange incident.



Different impacts


In 'Rumbo al infierno' we find several narrative focuses . On the one hand we have the inevitable police investigation, in which an attempt is made to find a rational explanation for what is happening, because of course, the possibility that these strange beings come from hell is not something that can be considered seriously. This anchors the series to reality, but knowing how to flee from the more monotonous side of this type of plot, in part because it is becoming increasingly clear to them that there is a supernatural component in another.


On the other hand, there is a sect obsessed with seeing in all this a sign of God, opting for this to concentrate everything around its leader, a man with a much more mundane way of life than one would expect in cases like this. However, that more fanatic side is coming to light little by little, thus allowing the character played with solvency by Yoo Ah-in to cajole the viewer in the same way that he does with his faithful.

https://verencanto-disney.tumblr.com/


https://encanto-castellano.tumblr.com/

And beyond all that we have how society responds to an event of these characteristics. In its own way, 'Rumbo al inferno' channels that energy typical of conspiracy theories giving it a religious touch that shows that in humanity there remains that fear associated with the possible existence of a higher entity.


Gradually becoming rare

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The mummy': an adventure film marvel with an overwhelming Brendan Fraser emulating Indiana Jones

Arcane' is a huge surprise: the Netflix series is visually stunning and very accessible to neophytes of the 'League of Legends' universe