Asked by z

in housemaid how is andrew the villan

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Which Housemaid do you mean — the novel, a film, or a TV episode? And who is Andrew (last name or a short scene description)? There are several works called The Housemaid and the character list differs.

If you want a quick, general answer about how a character named Andrew could be read as the villain, here are the usual indicators to look for and point to in the text/film:

- Actions that directly harm the protagonist or other sympathetic characters (abuse, neglect, physical violence, or causing someone’s death).
- Abuse of power or position (using wealth, authority, or trust to manipulate or exploit the housemaid).
- Deception and betrayal (lies, secret affairs, double-dealing, hiding evidence).
- Lack of empathy or remorse for harm caused.
- Selfish motivations that put others at risk (greed, jealous rage, sexual obsession, protecting reputation).
- Orchestrating or enabling further wrongdoing (hiring accomplices, covering up crimes).
- Clear antagonism in key scenes (confrontations where he obstructs the protagonist’s goals).

If you tell me which version and a couple of scenes or chapters, I’ll point to exact moments that make Andrew the villain.