Freshman

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Yeah, the story is actually quite complex. That is about as concentrated as the story can get. Here's the bigger picture:
The Gongilian and Rubicon peoples have been fighting for centuries. They are warring tribes, more or less. Through these wars the older generations have been wiped out, so there are literally only the younger generation left. This is all before The Third Warrior actually begins.
At the beginning of The Third Warrior the Gongilian people are leaving the gray caves, their place of refuge from the Rubicon, to go to their homelands. These 'homelands' offer peace and prosperity and so they seek them. But they are stopped along the way by the Rubicon. But soon after this ambush the Angorim people attack both of them.
The Angorim, a bloodthirsty, 'civilized' culture, had in the past posed as the ally of both tribes and were responsible for the Gongilian and Rubicon peoples fighting each other. They had set up the conflict between them, and now they have come to finish them both off.
But miraculously, the Gongilian and Rubicon people forget their hatred for each other and unite to defeat this company of Angorim. Their remainder of the movie is their struggle to become one people and to unite to defeat the Angorim.
Now, in the midst of all that, you find Hedron's emotional journey. That's the backdrop for it. Not too simple, I don't think. Perhaps too complex. I don't know, but I have confidence in the story.
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| Posts: 45 | Location: Ogden, UT | Registered: June 28, 2004 |    |
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