I am not impressed. Although the sound of the story is inconspicuous (although this may be a translation problem), the character looks stupid, and "fear" is unclear in the game, so it is not worth much.
"House Taken Over" by Ulio Cortazar in 1946 is a slowly moving short story focused on Argentine brothers and sisters living in the house left by parents. The story begins very realistically, but ultimately it becomes a magical realism that is defined as any story in which supernatural or magical elements are presented as part of the natural or real world. The story is told by the brothers. The lives of the two brothers and sisters are relatively unobtrusive, including housework and hobbies (knitting and reading). Eventually, their houses began to take over by the mysterious unknown power they heard in the vacant part of the house. Since they do not want to face mysterious forces, the unknown troops occupy more and more houses until their brothers and sisters are driven out of the street. 'House Taken Over' explores unknown, family, dependency and independence themes.
When writing a script for the A2 film research assignment, I chose to adapt Julio Cortázar's short story House Taken Over. Prior to writing, faculty read the story and said, "I will explain here." "This story is open, you can dislodge them from your house and show what happens when they leave." I guess this missed the point of the story completely. It is my dream, fear, and obsession to release brothers and sisters from my house. In the script I wrote, I chose to combine it with another story named "Write a letter to a young woman in Paris" in the collection of Bestiary (1951). The story is a young Argentinian story that takes care of the apartment for women who have been to Paris. When I was worried, he spit out the rabbits and they ruined the entire apartment.
Following the house of Bestiary there is an equally mysterious and mysterious story, a letter to a young woman in Paris. I inserted this story as an interconnect episode in my script as a series of fantasy. The story of this letter is a letter to a woman whose talker takes care of her house. Like brothers and sisters of House Taken Over, he is very depressed and feels a pain. He vomited his rabbit and then destroyed the entire apartment. In my script this series of dreams will serve as a proposal for these inner powers within the character.