00:00The Tauros masters are symbols of humanity and today we are experiencing a moment of dishumanization.
00:09How do we remain human and what does it mean to be human nowadays?
00:17Well, I mean, I'll start by saying that the movie tries to answer that by saying
00:22forgiveness and acceptance is one way, listening to the other and knowing that there are two sides to each story
00:31is truly powerful, but at the end of the day is by not being reactive but being actually
00:40sort of acting out of love, out of humanity, not responding violence with violence, listening,
00:49you know, it's very difficult.
00:51Sounds easy, but it isn't.
00:52Yeah, I think compassion, you know, being able to show compassion even to people that
01:01have been cruel to you and have shown physical cruelty, to find a way to find compassion and
01:08forgiveness, that I think, you know, and we see that in the film by, you know, the creature's
01:14last gesture is one of freeing, you know, people and so by having personal forgiveness, one
01:20that can have, you know, a greater forgiveness to society in that way.
01:26I think that we really misinterpret our time here and I think we have forever.
01:32that's part of being human and I think that a film like the Frankenstein that Guillermo has put
01:39together is something of like a breadcrumb trail toward us being able to really see it all as it is, you know.
01:52Frankenstein is a manifesto of the right to be imperfect.
01:57It is difficult for you to defend your authenticity in a world that wants perfection.
02:05No, I think that the demand for perfection only makes me want to be more imperfect and set more things on fire and break glass.
02:21Frankenstein is about loneliness and the need for love.
02:27Do you think that is a story that also describes today's world so connected but so lonely?
02:36We live in a world that is shaming emotion constantly, that irony has replaced intelligence, you know, and emotion is seen as a weakness, so that is not helping.
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