If I cross, never do it.

Enid 2022-04-20 09:01:59

I feel that the male protagonist's thinking is not in line with ordinary people's logic.
Either the male protagonist is brain-damaged, or the male protagonist has been tricked by the director and screenwriter.

Every Hector who went back during time travel deliberately created those problems in order to make what he saw happen.

If Hector2 is to make Hector1 disappear, so that he can stay, so that there is only one Hector in that time and space, his behavior is still understandable. Deliberately use the bike girl to lure Hector1 into the woods. But when Hector1 saw the passed out bicycle girl, he just stabbed Hector1's arm, and then he could start, and he just wanted to make Hector1 the same as he remembered, and his right arm was injured.

Speaking of Hector3, he went back in time to stop Hector2. He drove to hit Hector2's car. He had experienced Hector1 and Hector2. He should remember that his collision not only did not stop Hector2, but triggered Hector2's idea of ​​becoming a bandaged man. And when the Bicycle Girl was helping Hector3's house, if he was trying to save his wife, after hiding her, there was absolutely no need for him to frame the Bicycle Girl.

All of HectorN+1's behavior is to make what HectorN sees the same as HectorN+1's memory. Isn't this very brain-dead. Take the horror cruise ship as an example, every JessN+1 has experienced JessN and JessN-1, and then the whole thing is gradually clear. The psychological dynamics, thinking methods, and solutions of the characters also follow the number of crossings, see things change.

So... well, no idea.

Oh, by the way, I saw a film reviewer wrote this sentence: The hero is a cocooned idiot.

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Extended Reading

Timecrimes quotes

  • [last lines]

    Clara: Hector...

    Héctor: It's okay.

    [throws the scissors]

    Héctor: We still have a while before it starts raining.

  • Héctor: I need help. A man is after me. He's trying to kill me.