First of all, the movie is a good movie, and other movie critics have done a lot of plot analysis. I'm talking about another point about the movie.
I don't know how many friends have had this experience, or how often it happened. For myself, I feel this way from time to time. And this movie finally made me find my home.
What kind of experience I am talking about, that is, one day, when you are conscious, you will suddenly do a very stupid thing, make some exaggerated and low-level mistakes, or even do something very different from usual, or Something you've always deliberately avoided.
From my own experience, both small and large.
The youngest is playing fighting games, and he has already beaten the opponent with a little blood, but he is still almost full of blood. Then, in the following time, there were many mistakes, and the moves that were successful in the past would be just as ineffective as evil in just a few seconds, until you were killed by the blood on the opposite side.
Yes, I was talking about hitting the computer.
Slightly bigger, after drawing a picture for noon, the computer suddenly crashed. After restarting, the recovery document is still there, and then save it as soon as possible. Then I found that I was overlaying another painting. Just because I didn't pay attention to the wrong file to be overwritten when I clicked overwrite and save, and ps asked me if I wanted to confirm the save, I confirmed it without looking at it.
Another time I was taking a bus home from outside, and I was the one who reminded my two partners to "look out for what's missing from the seat" before getting off the bus. I also looked at my seat and didn't see anything obvious. Drops. Then within ten seconds of getting out of the car and starting the car, I found that my glasses had fallen off the car. (I don't have a high degree of myopia, so I wear glasses for a while and take them off)
The biggest one, I took two art exams. In the first year of painting plaster, I saw that the title photo I gave did not have a base, so I didn't draw a base. After I came out, I heard that I will deduct 5 points for not drawing the low seat. A 5 in the high segment is entirely possible the gap between 50th and 5th. Distressed to death. The second year also painted plaster. I looked at the photo and there was still no pedestal. I asked the invigilator and said it was okay not to draw. After he came out, he thought that the so-called invigilator was simply an ordinary college student, and he might not be sure what the scoring rules said casually.
The above series of examples are impressive to me, and there are many others that I forgot to mention but I remember similar things happening again. As it happens so often I conclude that these things have several things in common.
1. The occurrence of such things is accompanied by certain accidents, which initially lead to confusion of consciousness.
When I play games, I often fail to press a certain skill. The ps of my painting crashed suddenly. I didn't think my glasses would really fall off. The picture given in the question of my art test still didn't have a base.
2. Some subconscious attempts to make up for the incident during the incident will be inexplicably resolved like a god.
The same trick in the game was suddenly resolved, and ps helped me recover from being resolved by my cover error. My glasses should have been covered, so my examination was resolved, and my doubts were resolved by a word from the teacher.
3. Ultimately, both objectively and subjectively, whether it's someone else or you, agree that everything is your own fault.
And the above is exactly the same as in the movie.
The accident of the movie dad was that he didn't know that the drink contained lemon, and his consciousness began to become confused. The remedy was an asthma device, but it was resolved by being trampled by a ghost.
The police's accident was that they didn't expect the two brothers to escape, and their consciousness began to become confused. The reason for the shooting was because there was a remedy for going to the hospital immediately, but it was resolved by the infinite space.
The elevator operator's accident was that the guest was allergic to bees, and his consciousness began to become confused.
This movie finally mentioned the ghosts and ghosts in this kind of people's consciousness head-on. However, the movie uses a more direct method. The elevator operator's bee was released by him, and his bag fell to the ground on purpose. Including Dad stepping on the asthma machine seems to be intentional. The movie goes straight to the point of making this concept even more thorough - at that moment you're just unconscious, and your actions at that time are almost designed to make mistakes happen.
And in the end, the third point, everyone, including yourself, agrees that it's all your fault , which triggers the infinite time and space in the movie.
Human consciousness is really foggy. I often think that the series of things I have experienced can only be blamed on me in the end. It’s easy to get out of the way. What if things get more and more serious? Doesn't it mean that one day, someone will start to hate themselves because of a simple accident? This is really a godsend.
Sure enough, there is such a movie. Proof that it wasn't just me who thought about it. Human consciousness is not as peaceful as you might realize.
View more about The Incident reviews