>The liminal space where no human should be is actually the collective human unconsciousnessThat's the best Kane could come up with?
>>220986295it's Jungian
>>220986295no, he didnt write the script. it was amde by some hollyjew fella. kane's name was attached to this project to market the film to his large youtube audience.
>>220986295>IS THAT TWO CHAIRS STUCK TOGETHER??? AHHHH IM GOING INSAAAAANEE!!!
>>220986295it being all your wasted potential would of been too on the nose, desu senpai
they shouldve leaned more into the idea of reality being a simulation and the backrooms being an extra unusued area of the map/reality as it was originally
>>220987254That's a high ask. Hollywood couldn't wrap its head around video game concepts.
>>220987041amde>amdeamde>amdewell that's just discredited your entire pots
>>220986295I was fine with the idea of the backrooms being the human unconscious mind and thought it was quite a cool idea, but what I didn't really understand was why was it only Clark's demons that existed in there?When his therapist walked into the wall I was expecting her to find a different backrooms representing her mind, or to at least encounter objects / monsters related to her trauma of being trapped inside a house as a kid. Same for all the scientists that had been in there before.I also didn't understand why it was the real Clark that choked out and tied up his therapist. Surely it should be his dark self doing that as Clark didn't act like that in the real world.
>>220987409At the end where the therapist was in the interrogation room, the Backrooms already start reflecting on her being inside the room albeit with a more grotesque appearance. Maybe when you once enter the Backrooms you have some sort of telepathic link to it since she's not in the Backrooms anymore.>I also didn't understand why it was the real Clark that choked out and tied up his therapist. Surely it should be his dark self doing that as Clark didn't act like that in the real world.That was stupid but if I have to guess Clark saw too much things that remind him of his traumas or something which caused him to snap.
More like Blackrooms, amirite?
>>220987610https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qez2324zY0
I actually really liked it. Honestly forgot this was A24 for a second until the tall gangly monster stumbled in.
Why not just start setting fires? Would they spread?
>no-clip out of reality >End up in a metaphysical construct Nothing else would make logical sense. Otherwise you would just be noclipping into a different facet of reality.But the original pasta says "no-clip out of reality."
>>220986295>Over a decade of planning just to ripoff PersonaBRAVO KANE
>>220986295it's literally just persona 5 then?
gen z are cooked out of their minds, their entire culture revolves around brainrot from their ipads
>>220988049The OP is just too brown to grasp all the nuances. It's heavily hinted that there is some manner of non-human agenticity behind the complex that doesn't understand the things that it is 'remembering' and thus the bizarre mistakes that it makes.
>>220988086 (Me)Also the fact that Async researchers are using the voyager golden record to bait the entity suggests that they believe it is alien in origin. And when Mary is being lead to the interrogation room she sees that they have a whole room packed with the caveman standees that play the recording.
i will never watch anything anyone under 30 wrote
Maybe we will know more in the next movie
>>220986997It's Petersonian
>>220986295It should've been the space between realities. Closer to the original concept >>220987254 without being too video game-y for Hollywood execs to swallow.
>>220988146There's probably enough in the web series to figure it all out. In an interview Parsons mentions how when he first discussed it with a studio rep they had actually expressed an understanding of where he was going with it that even the fans hadn't yet figured out. I think thematically a lot of it has to do with the fact that you have a team of scientists discovering and trying to figure out something from a scientific angle where potentially no concrete scientific angle exists to be had. My big question is... is Phil Phillip Heymann of Oakridge National Laboratory mentioned in the web series?Because that would mean during the interrogation scene he's feigning some level of ignorance because Heymann is Ivan Beck's supervisor afaik. It would also explain the Spaghetti drop>I, My company, we" The intrigue of the moment caused him to nearly slip the truth.
>>220988254I've not seen web series so don't know. From what I understand it's it's own thing. But I could be wrong.I assume it's either they left things ambigous so viewer can imagine rest or they are going to make more movies
>>220988272It's actually meant to be copacetic with the web series while also being capable of being it's own thing. So it is meant to be complementary to the lore of the web series while not going too heavily into the deep lore so that you don't have to watch 13 hours of deep dive lore analysis videos to actually enjoy it.
>>220988307Oh okay. Well I didn't even know such thing existed before someone mentioned it here and don't really have interest watching yuotube stuff. So it's nice they made the movie stand alone so people can watch it without knowing about web series
>>220988118>cavemanI thought it was supposed to be Jesus.
>>220988331There is some additional intrigue to be gleaned from it but it's not as clearly spelled out as in the movie. Although even in the movie you're kind of going on some failed furniture salesman's interpretation of what's going on.
>>220986295I assume his co-writer came up with it, or at least turned that premise into a proper story.
>>220988417Hmh true, you just have to take what he says as granted. He also had mental problems, so maybe he isn't the most trusworthy guy to know about weird pocket dimensions.The scientist guys don't seem to be much wiser. Although you don't know much about them.
>>220987254>>220988224these ideas are all much worse than what they used. the trouble with autists is they don't understand the centrality of characters to storytelling. no one gives a shit about your "reality is a simulation!11" wizardry unless there is an emotional way to connect with the material.
>>220988254>There's probably enough in the web series to figure it all out.there isn't. unlike the movie, it's just a bunch of vaguely-interesting sounding ideas that don't gel into anything. that's why the movie is so impressive: normally Hollywood doesn't make anything of this kind of idea.
>>220986295>is actually the collective human unconsciousnessIs that really what the movie says? That's some hack Nolan tier bullshit.
>>220988590not really. one character has theory that it's things that have existed, but the place recreates those wrong like false memory. or something like that
>>220988529>noooooooo there can't be worldbuilding in a movie, it has to be about Traumaâ„¢ and going to therapy because that's what all movies are about
>>220988529It should be just a parallel dimension. Did you know that there might be infinite dimensions? In one of them I'm fucking Emma Watson in the ass 7 hours a day. EVERY SINGLE DAY. In another one it's the same, but 7 hours and one second. And so on...
WHY DOES THE BACKGROUND NEED TO BE "EXPLAINED" FUCKING ZOOMER FUCKS, LEAVE IT MYSTERIOUS
>>220988529kys normalfag
>>220988143A lot of the great classic literate was written by young people, Jane Austen wrote Pride & Prejudice when she was 21.I think younger people see the world with more emotional intensity, middle aged people start to mellow out emotionally or just become jaded.
>>220988590No.