After a deaf knight got a mysterious piece of gold from the river, he wanted to keep it for himself, but he woke up a siren covered in gold and jewels.
The whistle vented her anger on the knight's comrades. Everyone went crazy in the screams of sirens and then killed each other. The knight who stole gold was not tempted because he was deaf. The siren thought he was special and fell in love with him, but the knight only saw the gold and jewels on the siren. In the end, the knight and the siren chased each other, but in the end they all went to destruction.
The Story Connotation of Gibarro
The director condensed Gibarro to show the attitude of indigenous civilizations in South America to foreign colonists and the development of their relations. The first stage is the means adopted by the aborigines to attack and resist the new colonists.
In the second stage, the image of aborigines facing the colonialists is an illusion after packaging and disguising, which makes them mistakenly think that each other's peace is true and their integration with themselves is true, thus putting down their confrontational posture. In the third stage, the aborigines woke up after being deceived and suffering painful results, and finally attacked in an all-round way.
Gibarro takes myth as the main body, and takes the form of forcing ancient indigenous myths to dance and erasing the power contrast of Christian aura, which embodies the civilized suppression of European colonists by indigenous people.