The movie has a good idea and is very innovative, but there are too many bugs and it is not logical

Gust 2022-02-04 08:09:26

It is understandable that people enter a fantasy world after drinking ampoules, escape reality, and lose themselves. But the connection between the real world and the fantasy world is riddled with bugs.

Let's take a closer look at these bugs:

1. There is no description in the movie that people's fantasy exists out of the body. They don't work, live, and cook in the fantasy world. How can their bodies maintain normal physiological functions in the real world?

2. Can the fantasies of these people who drink hallucinogens be related to each other? If it is related, then Dylan found the heroine so easily, why is it so difficult for the heroine to find a son? If there is no connection, then everyone can change the image, and these images are out of personal fantasy, then is it not the same as what he sees himself and what others see? Then how did Dylan find the heroine?

3. After the heroine returned to reality, she found that her son had gone to the fantasy world and decided to return to the fantasy world to find her son! It really makes people feel ridiculous. Isn't it easier to find a person who knows his appearance in the real world than to find a person who does not know his appearance in the fantasy world?

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Extended Reading

The Congress quotes

  • Jeff: We at Miramount, want to... want to scan you. All of you - your body, your face, your emotion, your laughter, your tears, your climaxing, your happiness, your depressions, your... fears, longings. We want to sample you, we want to preserve you, we want... all this, this... this thing, this thing called..."Robin Wright".

    Robin Wright: What will you do with this... thing ? That you call Robin Wright?

    Jeff: We'll do all the things that your Robin Wright wouldn't do.

  • Dylan Truliner: Do you know what my dreams are, Robin? Robin? Can you see my dreams?

    Robin Wright: Four cockroaches playing poker on your lap, is that a dream?

    Dylan Truliner: Yes. But it's not mine.