crack in time

Rylan 2022-03-16 09:01:08

A group of people in the movie, because the plane accidentally passed through a crack in time, accidentally stayed in the original world, this world is fifteen minutes past, there is nothing in this time, the airport and the house are empty , food and wine are indifferent and tasteless, matches cannot be lit, gasoline cannot be burned, and this time and space will be swallowed up by the rapid Rangoliel, who become monsters that devour the past time and space, efficiently and environmentally friendly to remove the past. The world, the end result, of course, is that people who have been missed by time find the time crack and rush through it, returning to the original time. Compared with other classic movies that have been adapted such as "The Shining", "Green Mile" and "The Shawshank Redemption", this movie can only be said to be a less successful one of Stephen King's novels and movies, but it is also relatively Well, it retains the mysterious and shocking atmosphere of the original novel. Stephen King also has no intention to tell a Hawking-style scientific story about time and space, and in his work, all affairs in the past will become boring in the past, and will soon be swallowed up and disappear, and will never be recovered. According to the scientific point of view, even if we have a way to go back in time, we can't see anything, and going back in time can't change any reality - or, as long as it is past, all that is labeled with time no longer exists. , they have all been devoured by those monsters.

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The Langoliers quotes

  • Bob Jenkins: Let's say that every now and then a hole appears in the stream of time. Not a time-warm. A rip. A time rip. A rip in the central fabric.

    Don Gaffney: That's the craziest thing I ever heard of!

    Craig Toomy: Amen!

    Bob Jenkins: Mr. Gaffney, the situation we're in right now, this is crazy. So let's say that such rips do occur every now and then. It would be similar to rare weather phenomenons that are reported. Upside-down tornadoes, circular rainbows, daytime starlight.

    Captain Brian Engle: The aurora borealis.

    Bob Jenkins: [Bob looks to Brian in surprise] What?

    Captain Brian Engle: There was an aurora borealis over the Mojavi Desert when we left LAX. We were supposed to fly right into it.

    Bob Jenkins: Then that's it. An auroa over the desert. That strengthens my point. If we were to fly into that, and it was a time-rip then that means we're no longer in our own time, ladies and gentlemen.

  • Don Gaffney: [listening to Jenkins' time rip theory] That's the craziest thing I've ever heard.

    Craig Toomy: Amen!