BULL SHIT!

Braxton 2021-10-13 13:05:48

I have read all the film reviews I can find, but I seem to have forgotten a fundamental question: What is the correct universe?
If it is the correct time sequence, DARKO will not die in a plane crash 28 days later.
But the time was messed up, so Darko died 28 days ago.

OKAY, since it's messed up, how can it be messed up?
So a rabbit came out and saved Darko. Everything went smoothly and HAPPY ENDING.
But we found that because Darko was rescued, the universe was even more chaotic.

Therefore, the Upanishads said that DARKO must keep himself from being saved before the universe can be saved.
So Darko flooded the school, burned the houses, hacked the bronze statues, played awe-inspiring, and finally killed himself.

Okay, this is HAPPY ENDING, right?
But if the dead rabbit didn't save Darko in the first place, wouldn't it be HAPPY ENDING soon?

It turns out that this is the truth of the story: a rabbit saved a mortal person, and then told him that you must find ways to make yourself die again.
Then don’t you save her at the beginning, won’t you be over? ? ?

BLOODY BARELY BUG!

Also: If the engine travels through time and space and returns to 28 days ago and killed DARKO is the cause of the cosmic disorder, then DARKO must prevent the engine from traversing time and space in order to restore the normal universe, instead of letting himself be killed 28 days ago ! ! ! Because in the normal order, he would not be killed by the engine 28 days later! ! !

The director is really short-circuited.

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Extended Reading

Donnie Darko quotes

  • [Pommeroy is reading to the class from the 1954 short story "The Destructors" by Graham Greene]

    Karen Pommeroy: "There would be headlines in the papers. Even the grown-up gangs who ran the betting at the all-in wrestling and the Barrow Boys would hear with respect of how Old Misery's house had been destroyed. It was as though this plan had been with him all his life, pondered through the seasons, now in his 15th year crystallized with the pain of puberty." What is Graham Greene trying to communicate with this passage? Why did the children break into Old Misery's House? Joanie?

    Joanie James: They wanted to rob him.

    Karen Pommeroy: Joanie, if you had actually read the short story, which, at a whopping 13 pages, would have kept you up all night, you would know that the children find a great deal of money in the mattress, but they burn it.

  • Gretchen: Um, where do I sit?

    Karen Pommeroy: Sit next to the boy you think is the cutest.

    [the class gasps]

    Karen Pommeroy: Quiet! Let her choose.

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