The inescapable grandmother paradox

Salma 2022-04-15 09:01:07

You passed the exam and got beaten up by your mother.
God thinks you are pitiful, so he sent you back to the past, and you answered 100 points because you knew the answer to the test.
When you got home, mom gave you a big thumbs up.
It's a happy ending, isn't it?
Not really!
Because you scored 100 points in the test, you won't be beaten by your mother, you won't be beaten by your mother, and God won't feel sorry for you, and God won't feel sorry for you, and won't send you back to the past, So you still came home with a duck egg and got beaten up again...
Back to the movie.
The first half of the film is very slow-paced and makes you sleepy.
The second half is exciting. The identity of several people is very innovative. I am very curious about how the film will end and how to circumvent this grandmother paradox.
In the end, it ended after "Mom gave a big like", and it ended like that!
The 2011 film, in that era, may be able to ignore the grandmother paradox. But if you put it now, I believe that no film and television work related to time travel dares to regard the grandmother paradox as non-existent, and it will end like this.
So, I prefer to believe that this is a work of magical realism - there is no real time and space travel from the beginning to the end, but just to explore the philosophical question of what if history is changed.
Or maybe it's just a ghost movie about a few ghosts who have died getting together to recognize their relatives in the underworld.
In short, don't really travel through time and space, just really change history.

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