Thread:Aesop's Feast/@comment-1672596-20140904171718/@comment-25030828-20140904174617

I guess you aren't really wrong if you put it that way... But the issue still stands that Frollo does not show remorse for his sins, which really is one of the things that makes him so interesting – As shown in Hellfire, he knows Lust is a sin, but tries to push the blame off himself, eventually twisting his mind into "absolving" himself while still allowing himself to continue his lustful pursuits.

In the end, it's his utter blindness to the darkness within himself that holds him back from being truely remorseful.