Annabelle Creation: an analysis
Arts & Entertainment → Television / Movies
- Author Thomas H Cullen
- Published April 26, 2018
- Word count 596
In a previous article that I wrote, I gave a splitting reference to the main theme of Annabelle Creation; though its validity can’t be confirmed (as if any idea in any movie can be confirmed), the idea that was highlighted was to do with a copy ending a problem by not being part of the solution.
The idea can feel somewhat whimsy, but it worked for the article that it was part of. In hindsight, I think I may have now since come across a better, and a more emotional point of view of Annabelle Creation.
(And yes: a point of view that’s emotional even with respect to my past desire to be a guardian to the actress Talitha Bateman)
Maybe this isn’t emotional, but let’s see if it is: the gist, and the basic perception of the new idea is that evil has the right to be left alone. In Annabelle Creation, the prequel story about the real origin of the Annabelle doll, the most underlying, deep and important concept that defines the story is that evil is a force of nature that has rights of its own – and that these rights, or just that this fundamental right to exist needn’t be at the expense of any opposite force of nature.
Overall, should this kind of concept be emotional? Instinct says that it should, but does logic say that it should?
Evil is the impossible. Many wouldn’t come to that conclusion, or at least wouldn’t feel the need to come to that conclusion, but it’s a logical conclusion to arrive at. Evil is annihilation, and annihilation can be interpreted as just sheer and simple absence – the impossible.
In light of this, it’s now the impossible that has rights. Since a right is an approval, the dynamic at play is the relationship between an approval and the impossible.
As the impossible is what can’t happen, the impossible is an action that can’t happen. An action that can’t happen is an action that influences approval.
Approval is also action, which means that whilst an approval is a copy of an action that can’t happen, it’s only the action that can’t happen which can control the action that can happen.
In other words: hierarchy is a copy of evil, but it’s only evil that can serve hierarchy.
(Needless to say, this will need further examination)
An alternate version, of hierarchy being a copy of evil is equality being a detached force from evil. And then in ensuing logic, the substitute for just evil having the power to serve hierarchy is not just equality having the inability to hurt equality: thus, the updated dilemma is when evil and equality have nothing to do with one another, and yet evil can’t possibly hurt equality.
Evil isn’t a copy, and it can’t hurt copy: a copy is evil, and a copy can hurt evil.
Evil is copy, and by being copy evil has the ability to end itself.
In Annabelle Creation, and in the story of Janice, the entire universe is nothing but a device that evil has created in order to end itself.
Planets, galaxies, science, mathematics and biology are all just follies, all just fictions that evil has created as an elaborate way to destroy its own existence.
This is where I ask if emotion is warranted; in actuality, this is where I’m currently asking if my past desire to be a father figure to Talitha Bateman is warranted.
In all likelihood, the world's most enthusiastic fan of the 2017 horror spin-off Annabelle Creation
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