The comet didn't come, it was me. . .

Aurore 2022-10-02 22:10:12

The movie ended fruitlessly in the thriller of a heroine with a classic suspenseful face. The whole film tells a very ordinary story in the name of physical quantum theory, but for me, who is not very knowledgeable, a little nervousness is enough.
"Time" and "space" were originally uncertain things. They were conceptualized by scientists and then taught to us through textbooks. The night the comet came, the "comet" was a mess, and the comet only showed its face a few times. The biggest feature of the film is the suspense, but when two people in time and space, or themselves, meet, it's horrifying to think about it. No matter how calm you are, when "self" stands in front of you, it's really scary. Few people can be happy.
We often say that we can’t trust others. After seeing it, we can’t even trust the second self. We can reveal ourselves and kill ourselves.
Or believe in the only self in your life. Recently, I found that confidence is really a good thing.
cheers for physics, cheers for science, always so unpredictable. . .
Good night. . . HBTS

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Extended Reading

Coherence quotes

  • [last lines]

    Kevin: [his phone ringing] That's weird. It's you calling me. Hello?

  • Laurie: Em, you seem to be the comet expert here. What happened the last time?

    Em: This one passed over a hundred years ago, but much farther.

    Laurie: But do we know about anything that happened?

    Em: Nothing happened then, it was too far away.

    Laurie: So, is there any reason we should be freaked out right now?

    Em: Well, I mean, it is a lot closer this time.

    Laurie: What does that mean?

    Em: Okay. I read one more thing...

    Lee: Oh, another story!

    Em: Just one more. It's called the Tunguska Event, and, um, it was a comet or a meteor or something like that, that entered the atmosphere over Siberia and exploded over Earth. So it didn't actually have physical impact. It didn't touch Earth, it didn't leave a crater or anything, but the force of that explosion flattened trees for hundreds of miles. But it only killed about one to two people.

    Laurie: It's Siberia. There were probably only two people there.

    Em: Yeah, but they don't necessarily...

    Mike: [jokingly] It wiped out the population of Siberia.

    Laurie: Basically, yeah.

    Em: Right.

    Laurie: Well, that doesn't make me feel better.

    Kevin: And when was this?

    Em: It was like, in 1908, 1903...

    [Suddenly they hear someone banging on the door and get startled]