They portrayed this situation in Jessica Jones S1 from the crush's POV, with Jessica asking herself if the right thing to do is try to turn Kilgrave into a positive force for the world with herself as his babysitter
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Which is a perspective that IMO can only be made sense of heretically by arguing that either Christ is still in Hell, or else he at the very least experienced an infinity of pain when he went there, otherwise it just doesn't add up
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Why doesn't it add up? I mean, not that I'm invested in any of the premises, but I'm not sure why those would help.
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Yeah. And theology aside, it's an interesting metaphor for these kinds of 'redemption' focused stories, because it shifts the focus about who's making the sacrifice. I mean, it's easily a form of fridging, too, the pure heroine sacrificing herself to save the antihero.
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I mean, I think Jojo Rabbit is interesting because apart from the intrinsic evil of being who he is at the time he is, Jojo doesn't actually do anything particularly bad and Elsa doesn't end up sacrificing anything for him. It's just that he also, doesn't sacrifice anything
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