The setting is easy to see from the movie. Time is life and money. Everyone can live to the age of 25. Before that, they cannot accept the gift of time from others. After the age of 25, the age will not increase. If you want to live, you must earn time.
This is the definition of the background. As for the value of time and the macro-control of the economy, this is a deeper issue. It is really unclear for a 100-minute movie to explain these issues.
Conjectures about the details of the movie:
1. The heroine does not have Stockholm Syndrome. Judging from the person who gave the male pig’s feet time and jumped off the building before, the editor probably wanted to put the topic of the meaning of life on the heroine and interpret it through the heroine. Amplify the profound thinking of life due to long living.
But unfortunately, the film did not shoot well at this point, and the portrayal was very bad.
2. The male protagonist himself should be the male protagonist's father.
The male protagonist can fly over the eaves, shoot, play cards, and even play the zero game very well. How can a poor boy know so many things and not be simply proficient.
According to the dialogue between the last time administrator and the male protagonist:
"You designed me, right?"
"That was a long time ago"
"Yeah, no one can find it"
"Of course it can't be found. I can't find your clock. Activate, but once activated I can turn it back. You forgot, I'm the time director, and this way, I designed you to grab that box. Ha, time?"
"Your time?" (sarcastically), "Unless you give me back the time you stole from me in the past"
...
if the theory holds, there are a lot of details.
For example, how does Time Management manage time?
How does the administrator steal the male lead's time?
What exactly does the so-called start and turn mean?
Or is the man who gave him 100 years a trap?
There is also the heroine's father, who doesn't seem to be running a company, but seems to be complicit in the Time Administration.
unknown.
The last highlight, the heroine's father: "You can't change this system."
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