There are a lot of bugs in this movie

Drake 2022-03-24 09:02:07

There are quite a few bugs in this film.

1. My father has a camera that couldn't exist ten years ago.
This is a handheld digital model, and cameras in his father's day were much larger than this, so they should have wondered at first why there was such a new model in his father's junk.

2. Cameras from ten years ago have no battery leaks, are brand new and can be used right out of the box.
These few protagonists with excellent physical technology are not surprised at all. .
They are very knowledgeable about science and technology. They took it out like digging out the wine from a sunken ship, and started drinking and getting high. . .

3. The characters disappear because the set time and space is a single-line universe similar to the Ubis ring, but the set items will not disappear, so the ending can have an extra camera.
Human beings are actually carbohydrates plus trace elements and the elements that make up the camera are essentially the same. If the same people disappear because of the mutual exclusion of substances, then the camera should be the same. . .

4. If one more camera is reasonable, then they should belong to the material transfer of the multiverse, and then the characters should also accumulate like a horror cruise ship. . .
The protagonists have cross-universe equipment, so the characters should not overlap and disappear. . .
As an off-topic, I always feel that Sun Wukong uses a single hair to transform thousands of Sun Wukong's techniques, playing an emergency collection of multiple time and space, rather than an instant clone of a single hair. Clones take time to grow, right? . .

5. One of the biggest bugs is to change the past and never return to the present. For example, the protagonists cheat in exams:
A. If it is a single-line universe, then I at 12 o'clock help me at 10 o'clock to pass the exam successfully, and then go back to 12 o'clock, but at 10 o'clock, after knowing the events of my future change, I immediately There will be a new unknowable and uncontrollable me, and this new me and the 12 o'clock me will not be the same me. . .
To put it bluntly, in the single-line universe, if the 12 o'clock me cheats on the 10 o'clock me in the exam, then the 12 o'clock me will be impossible to exist the moment I return. .
B. If it is a multiverse, after the 12 o'clock me helps the 10 o'clock me pass the exam successfully, is the universe that left at 12 o'clock still the same universe? In short, although the universe that left at 12 o'clock does not have a second me, the changes produced by the butterfly effect are uncontrollable and unknowable by the 12 o'clock me. . .
That is to say, the things done at 12 o'clock have made the id return to a brand new universe instead of the one it left at 12 o'clock. .
What's more serious, the protagonist's teacher's problem is different every time, which means that the protagonist runs into a new universe that he has never been to every time, and what he finally succeeds in changing the process of N universes. . .

6, 3, 4, and 5 are all inferred based on the current quantum theory. Of course, these theories have not yet been demonstrated. . .

Finally, let's talk about the shooting method of this pseudo-documentary:
it is very uncomfortable to watch, and it affects the sense of substitution in the viewing, but it does not have the mystery and suspense caused by the witch Bueler.
Fail.

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Extended Reading

Project Almanac quotes

  • Jessie Pierce: I told you we couldn't die.

  • David Raskin: I got my wallet. Never mind. I thought it was...

    Jessie Pierce: You thought it was on my side of the car?