The dark side of love plays an important role in Faust of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Part 1) and Natan the Wise of Gottsold Ephraim Lessing. Love is the reason individuals depart from the way of enlightenment and begin to act in a strange and unpredictable way. It lowers the inference ability of an individual and deprives any incentive he is seeking enlightenment. Since love is based on faith, it violates the ideal of enlightenment emphasizing individual thought.
At the end of the eighteenth century, Emily Bron 's "Wuthering Heights" was a strange book, but readers will sit at the edge of the seat when Bronte explores love, revenge and the dark side of man and nature. However, if Wuthering Heights were founded at another time, many situations would not be possible from Heathcliff to Enshaw family, Hareton and Cathy alliance. Also, many events include eerie, strange emotions. This is similar to the style seen in many of the Gothic novels that had been in fashion from the 18th century to the 19th century.
The film Black Film (mostly light gray, black and white) is filled with the dark and inhumane aspects of humanity, cynicism and love of fate. Sadistic side. . Threats, pessimism, anxiety, doubt that everything goes wrong, dirty realism, waste, destiny, failure, and a suppressive atmosphere of traps are the stylized features of black movies. The main character of a black movie is usually moved by their past or human weakness to repeat the previous mistake.
Humanity is a subtle balance of light and darkness, or good and evil. This unstable balance is maintained most of the time, but if there is a cause of conversion, there are dark or abnormal surfaces. The way and reason for this 'dark side' varies from person to person. It is only eyebrows of other people that can push a person "beyond the edge". In this case, the old man's "eyes of a vulture" will cool the narrator's blood. This irrational fear evoked the dark side and eventually resulted in murder. Although the narrator plans, executes and hides the crime, "The hat will never be hidden inside of himself ..." (Silverman 208) The talker tells about the illness which enhances the sensation. It's a sharp hearing. I heard everything. Heaven And Earth. I heard lots of things in hell. "