When two or more people share the same tragic experience, but from opposite sides of the fence, their paths often tend to divide over the years, as the two develop quite differently over time. For the victims of such tragedies, the memory tends to haunt their waking hours, causing grief, frustration and anger, but occasionally it develops into a more divine view of existence. But the memory does not haunt an individual carrying subconscious guilt from the experience; it hunts them. They spend the greater part of their lives trying to forget the entire ordeal and may even effectively and completely remove it from their day-to-day awarenessafor a time anyway. Now, if those two different worlds somehow collide once again years later, they clash; the lion attacks, jumps up and grabs the hunted from behind. This is one such instance, the story of Leonard Lee and Shane Bohdan.
评价“Woe to the Hunted”