Originally posted by: seena007
Originally posted by Minuu
In reply to your comments and in total agreement,
Todays episode actually made me think that since he was educated abroad and was away from his father then what made him be like what he is now?Didn't he have any influence of his yrs of living abroad and interaction with frnds?Now all this is going 2 be a mystery regarding Samar Tyagi ,a bunch of unanswered questions!
Exactly, so what went wrong with this poor soul? There are a hundred thousand questions that are being unanswered. He is a poor little rich boy, who had to be evil and destructive, to get his father's love and attention.
From the beginning to the end of the show, the real victim is Samar. A psychologically damaged man who has become criminally insane. This is very tragic!
To your last paragraph: It blatantly demonstrates in Samar how criminality can easily corrupt the mind, as now we are witnessing the very last moments of madness that he has succumbed to having been imprisoned by RKT since who knows when.
Of all the characters he is the most disturbed and unstable almost having no will of his own to stand to the wrongdoings that both him and father wrought together such that he is indeed the true victim as you said. In the creative sense especially, carrying the burden of evil having committed and living with the crime.
That Samar is plagued with thoughts of revenge and possibly a hidden resentment towards his father that finds its expression through his outward agitation and frustration, is subtly apparent, it might have been possible that on a subconscious level, he was also unsettled by his own criminal actions. But he unfortunately adheres by that label that everyone sees him in; that being a rich brat.
If the concept of 'Kaali' is still valid then dev would not exist, rather it would be a face-off between the strong powerful woman vs the man representing evil. But this has not been the case hence they ought to have invested more sensibly and realistically into Samar's character that might have afforded a lot more into his condition as a human, beyond being purely evil. I said it before and say it again, I detest
it when the character is not considered in its totality as a human being existing in the world, but is thrown instead with black and white, heroic and villain labels.
Shamefully the cvs have not picked up on this interesting aspect but have also brought a tragic end to creative possibility itself that was always there, in the form of Samar.