The film’s final interpretation of Netherworld is to use condensed matter to print the Netherworld and the nervous system peeled from the living person in the crystal coffin. The two constitute a quantum entanglement relationship, or the nether body of thought is the quantum entangled state of neurons in the coffin. But the effect of quantum entanglement is two-way, and besides the state, does it have its space-time position? So a question arises. Assuming a nether moves n distance in space, then its corresponding entangled state should also move n distance in the opposite direction. Nether runs all over the street. Will their brains lie there without moving?
Once the quantum entanglement relationship is formed, energy is not needed to maintain it, and the communication between them does not require any medium, so there is no "umbilical cord" that can be cut off. The only way to destroy is to interfere or destroy one of them, but if the entanglement relationship is destroyed, will the other party be destroyed? Here I also want to put a question mark, do the two parties that constitute the entanglement still have a primary and secondary relationship?
I still have a question about condensed matter. How do they maintain their state? We can make all kinds of incredible objects on accelerators in the laboratory, but maintaining their state requires energy, otherwise those who walk in the atmosphere at room temperature Nether, it will disappear instantly like a snowflake falling into a pot of boiling water.
Finally, let’s talk about the second half of the plot. For such an ultra-technological laboratory, in the face of this extremely dangerous unknown subject, shouldn’t its crisis handling device be one-button destructive? How can it be manually pulled? Turnouts feel like primitive equipment like an abandoned factory. The more unconventional way to deal with it is that a traitor appears here, which can be a crazy scientist, a stimulated technician or something, lock himself in the master control room, and then. . . Although substandard but at least logical.
Overall it's pretty good, with some loopholes, giving 4 stars.
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