Mike Kelly once summarized some very deep matters into one of his novels: "We made our own monsters, then they are afraid that they will show us something "This idea is probably applicable to some Gothic horror novels that people's greatest fear is simply reflection and written in every aspect of life, more specifically several years ago. In Mary Sherry's classic Frankenstein, people first thought about the idea of ​​reflecting on their monsters. Since a widely adapted story was written in 1818, people are discussing and questioning who is the protagonist and who is the story's opponent, Mary Sherry himself may not have this problem either unknown.
Interestingly, this is how it works in popular culture. Of course, the founder of so many people is Mary Shelley. Many people draw parallel lines between "Frankenstein monster" and Roy Batti with "Blade Runner". Both are arrogant works of creators / scientists. Both of them faced the "creator" and asked him to solve the problem he had already destroyed. In Kubrick / Spielberg's film artificial intelligence, we got another robot image that was abused and abused "others". The tragic atmosphere of the child robot "David" exacerbates this, and his love is stronger and pure than anyone's ability. This movie gives us a different view on the issue of "creators and creators". At the end of the movie the competition trying to cheer up the advanced robot of David fascinated him for exactly the direct connection with their "creators" - the now extinct human beings. Clearly, despite their progress, they are amazing and confused about the mystery of cognition and creation.
There are some similarities between monsters and Mary. First, she agrees with the monster (as a refused child). It took two years to look at Baxter like a monster looking into the Dallas hut. Another similarity is that neither Mary, monster, mother nor father. Finally, the monster also read the same as Mary read in 1814: the lost paradise, the suffering of the young Vit, the life of the Roman Emperor of Purtak, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Byron Poetry