Steven's investigation begins, the first time through Steven to find his identity, the train explodes. A second trip through Steven found the bomb and the train exploded. The third time Steven took Christina out of the train and tracked the wrong target, the train exploded and Steven was killed by the train. The fourth time Steven was caught stealing a gun, the train exploded. So the same episode keeps happening, but each time it happens differently, but it turns out that Steven is dead. This can't help but think of "Lola Run" Lola ran three times, but each run encounters different situations, which will lead to different endings. Movies divide the same space at the same time into equal quantities for different calculations.
In addition to finding the real culprit of the bombing, Steven is also constantly investigating his true identity. After countless eight-minute crossings, Steven found the murderer who set the bomb and prevented other explosions from happening, but Steven and Christina died under the gun of the murderer, and Steven's mission was completed. Steven asked Captain Goodwin to cross himself back to the train again. In addition to finding the murderer, Steven wanted to keep himself and Christina in the source code world forever, because Steven knew that he was a The soldiers who died in Afghanistan were just passing through the source code so that he had the illusion of being alive.
The most touching scene of the movie was released. After Steven called his father at the last minute of his life, he kissed Christina at the last second. All things in time and space were frozen at this moment, and they were all held. Yes, if life can have an eight-minute time-travel, I would also like to travel back to the moment I met you, make a phone call to my family at the last minute, and let’s kiss again at the last second.
Last year's "Inception" gave us a new understanding of dreams. It turns out that dreams can still be created, and they can sneak into other people's dreams. Dreams can also be layered and emerge endlessly. , Mystery Domain. In fact, in a low-cost film work like Duncan Jones' "The Moon", the proposition of clones has been recombined. The same clones will have different emotions, and clones also need care and warmth.
This time, Duncan Jones' "Source Code" extends human life. A person whose limbs are dead but still has a mental center is sent to a certain time and space in the past through a computer, but only for eight minutes. In "Inception", everyone has been discussing whether the top has fallen and whether the hero has returned to reality from a dream. "Moon" was sent back from the moon is the deity or just a clone, I have been guessing. "Source Code" also has such an open ending. Can the male protagonist always be in the source code world, or is Captain Goodwin's world also a source code world?
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