I think a lot of people say it's a bit similar to Inception, but I think this film is similar to inception in the concept of "dream within a dream". In fact, the topic it wants to discuss should be human-computer interaction, which is very similar to Serac's experiment on Maeve's awakening in westworld S3E2, except that the former is obtained by passively seeing a letter from the developer. Knowing the truth of the world, the latter questioned its own environment step by step through continuous trial and error, and then discovered the virtual world in which it lived, so the film only made a relatively simple human-computer interaction. , but did not discuss it in depth, of course, this is already ahead of the time in the movies of the last century. Finally, I would like to make some comments on the behavior of the heroine. In the film, the heroine killed her real-life husband through a black police officer in the first-level interaction, and replaced him with an upright personality. I would like to ask this approach Is it ethically or legally justifiable? "You want to kill me, so I have to kill you first." The message conveyed in the film made me shudder. Seeing the last upright hero and heroine hugging and watching the sunset, I feel so intimidating . .
I think a lot of people say it's a bit similar to Inception, but I think this film is similar to inception in the concept of "dream within a dream". In fact, the topic it wants to discuss should be human-computer interaction, which is very similar to Serac's experiment on Maeve's awakening in westworld S3E2, except that the former is obtained by passively seeing a letter from the developer. Knowing the truth of the world, the latter questioned its own environment step by step through continuous trial and error, and then discovered the virtual world in which it lived, so the film only made a relatively simple human-computer interaction. , but did not discuss it in depth, of course, this is already ahead of the time in the movies of the last century. Finally, I would like to make some comments on the behavior of the heroine. In the film, the heroine killed her real-life husband through a black police officer in the first-level interaction, and replaced him with an upright personality. I would like to ask this approach Is it ethically or legally justifiable? "You want to kill me, so I have to kill you first." The message conveyed in the film made me shudder. Seeing the last upright hero and heroine hugging and watching the sunset, I feel so intimidating . .
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