Movie viewing order: HBO "Western World"-1973 "Western World"-this "Future World".
Guessing the relatively consistent tone of the Nolan brothers, even the sequel will not make excessive changes. It is basically a deep excavation of the story of the previous work and adjustments to the character settings based on changes in the time environment. Therefore, when I watch these two movies, I want to try to see if I can fill in the pits of American dramas. Purpose is simple.
This "Future World" is the sequel to "Western World" in 1973. After the robot went out of control and slaughtered human customers and human scientists, delos abandoned Westworld and opened several other parks, one of which was the Future World. The male and female reporters were invited by what appeared to be the company’s management (actually, they were eventually confirmed to be robots) to report on the reopened park. Traveling with male and female reporters were Russian generals (during the Cold War), Japanese VIPs (the image of Japanese unruly and subdued), a scientist seemed to be conspiring to engage in a public investigation permitted by delos During the process, the male and female reporters learned that all technicians are robots. They felt there was a conspiracy, so they started a secret investigation. He broke into a manufacturing workshop for robots in samurai world (appeared in the last episode of the American TV series), and fought with several samurai robots. They found that 400-700 robots are afraid of water (what?), so all water-related work is done by a worker (should be a human) who looks super-like in the American TV series Bernard (Arnold). Through this worker, they have discovered a shocking secret. ——The doctor is copying robots that are exactly the same as male and female reporters, Russian generals, and Japanese VIPs, and gives instructions to the robots to kill real people. In the end, the male and female reporters killed the robots who wanted to replace them and left delos safely, but the two should have been replaced.
The general plot is like this. One more thing, the actor who played the female reporter is Gwyneth Paltrow's mother.
Next, let’s talk about clues that seem to be able to fill in the pits of American dramas:
1. All the technicians are robots. The explanation given in this movie is that the massacre occurred in "Western World" because of human error. The person who supervised the machine was replaced by a robot. So, is the Chinese-American felix in the American TV series necessarily also a robot? Season1 has confirmed that Felix’s work partner, the chirping white man, is a robot (after his throat was cut, he used the tool to repair the host to let him come back alive), guess felix’s The setting changed from repairing the host to helping maeve escape.
2. Kill real people and replace them with robots. In "Future World", the hero and the heroine finally defeated the robot and escaped alive. According to Season1's current information, Treasa is also a robot. After Bernard regained his memory, there was a scene where Treasa and Bernard talked about the problem of learning through chatting between Hosts after the storm was overturned. The problem with Treasa's setting was that she got stuck. Then the robot may be killed in the park. There was once a real Treasa who was replaced by a robot by Ford. Similarly, in the last episode Delores killed Ford and the people in the board, it may also be for this purpose.
3. In the American drama with almost infinite character appearance settings, Bernard (Arnald) and the workers are so similar in appearance. The workers have a broken robot to accompany in the movie, just a few lines, two characters The farewells show that workers’ views on robots are closer to the feelings between friends and humans. Does it imply that Ford is more like the doctor who has the so-called "conspiracy" in this movie, and Arnold is the role of the worker. The American drama is based on these two roles to look at the core of the robot.
4. There is a plot in which a female reporter experiences new technology in delos, which allows others to see the dreams of the dreamer. In the dream, she wore a blue dress similar to Delores, and she wore white shoes (lady with white shoes), escaped in a huge maze-like scene, and was captured and tied by a group of people in red who copied them described in the movie. On the wooden stand, at this time the black-hat male robot from "Western World" appeared, rescued the female reporter, and the two kissed. . . When I saw this, I was surprised that in this movie this is the dream of a female reporter (human), and in the American TV show, this is the world of Delores. The host thinks that the time to see Ford is the dream. Secondly, the love between humans and robots is also a clue, is the loveline of William and Delores derived from this.
Of course, this is a movie from the 1970s. The lack of theory and the limited level of special effects at the time affected the presentation of the movie. But looking at the plot, there are still a lot of thoughts.
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