It's us in the five-dimensional space who saved us again

Donna 2022-04-22 07:01:03

Someone hit the ring and came up with a replicator.

Some people sculpt dreams and die in reality.

Someone repeatedly taught Machine to distinguish between good and evil, someone taught Samaritan obedience and cleansing, and someone died for the silver lining in the vast algorithm.

Reality soon ushered in a nuclear war, and the Samaritans (now known as Rehobo) controlled human behavior patterns to suppress human self-destruction, while purging outliers. The technology of the replicator is updated, and the dream comes into reality. You indulge in the West World, just like those old people who bought dreams back then.

But Machine did not disappear. The old man put the real data of Westworld players into the melting pot system and taught the robot to understand human nature, but he did not have the good temper of that person, and the training was too bloody. She threw everyone's dead end predicted by Lei Hebo directly into their faces, the world is in chaos again, and you start to wonder who is right.

This tug of war continued for many years, until only corn could survive on the earth, and the wind and sand filled the sky. A father who wanted to die in the universe for half his life solved the secret of gravitational waves, and his friends in the fifth dimension helped him pass the data to his daughter through the four-dimensional space. Humanity is a little farther from self-destruction.

People in five-dimensional space seem to be very comfortable doing this kind of thing. They know the secret of time, possess antimatter, and try to correct the mistakes of the past, such as solving a PUA domestic violence scumbag whose cradle system is tied to the lifeline of human beings.

The world is like Gotham, humans will not give up self-destruction, Samaritans will not give up control, and Machine will always remind you of the complexity and diversity of human nature. But there is always a group of people who never stop exploring the way to survive, and are even willing to sacrifice themselves to protect your barren imagination about evil.

This is the Nolan Brothers universe.

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Extended Reading
  • Dominic 2022-03-25 09:01:05

    ? How can this continue to blow? Just like to admit that I have a low IQ instead of thinking that Nolan’s narrative is really problematic? I watched the whole process inexplicably, a bunch of tall terms stuck on my face, one sentence was too late to digest, and the next sentence followed. The game upgrades and clearance tasks are the same as the scenes and locations. The final battle is really watching. I'm impatient. I keep repeating the meaningless fighting scenes, and a bunch of people walking backwards like convulsions. For a long period of time, these scenes have no effect on the narrative except for being cool and dragging. Such a movie will neither make me feel "good" right now, nor will I have the desire to have aftertaste after watching it. During the process, I watch the watch almost every half an hour, and once in the last five minutes. I really did my best to leave halfway...

  • Kaia 2022-03-25 09:01:05

    2.5 / On the way home, I asked myself three questions: ① In the 150 minutes, besides the five parties, is there any scene worth remembering or any moment of power revealed? The answer is no, so add one star for the five parties. ②Will playing an ugly action scene look better when played backwards? The answer is still not good-looking boots. ③Nolan believes it or not, "Don't try to understand it, feel it"? I think he believed it when he licked the CP of the two male protagonists at the last moment. I use almost every minute to tell you: how bad my director ability is, how my audiovisual and text are out of touch, how my narrative has no sense of rhythm, how my characters are dry and cool, and how my concept can only be The most mechanical way to advance the deployment. The whole film is: catch, pull, see, elbow, four characters.

Tenet quotes

  • Neil: It seems you need an introduction to a prominent Mumbai local on short notice. I'm Neil.

    The Protagonist: I need an audience with Sanjay Singh.

    Neil: That's not possible.

    The Protagonist: Ten minutes, tops.

    Neil: Time isn't the problem. Getting out alive is the problem.

  • Neil: All doors are fireproof. Hydraulic closers, simple key and electronic triggers. Surprisingly easy once they've been locked down.

    The Protagonist: Why a lockdown?

    Neil: Power switches to fail safe securing the outdoors, indoors revert to factory settings. Then pickable locks, it's a child's play really.

    The Protagonist: Child's play? They're inside airport security, they have to worry about climate control not armed raid.

    Neil: So how do we get enough fire power through the perimeter to trigger the lockdown procedure. That wall of Freeport.

    The Protagonist: You've got something?

    Neil: You're not gonna like it.