• bless@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    If you listen carefully, there’s someone speaking in Norwegian in that scene. If you translate it it says: watch the movie and information is revealed

  • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    In that lady’s defense, I’m pretty sure the opening scene of The Thing was intentionally written to make people go “what the fuck? why are they shooting at that dog?!”

    • k0e3@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      Yes, and in the guy’s defense, the rest of the movie is written to reveal more info.

      • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        In that lady’s defense, some people seem to have their internal monologue tuned to the wrong frequency, and usually blurt it out instead.

          • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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            3 days ago

            Matter of taste. For my part, I don’t like watching movies with anyone who can’t carry a conversation while it’s happening. I love getting the live reactions and theories as the movie is still playing out.

    • TheSambassador@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Also I think they literally tell you (just not in English) why they’re shooting at it at the beginning of the movie.

        • bstix@feddit.dk
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          3 days ago

          He literally says: "Se til helvete og kom dere vekk! Det er ikke en bikkje, det er en slags ting! Det imiterer en bikkje, det er ikke virkelig! Kom dere vekk, idioter!”

          So, I guess that ruins the movie for anyone who understands that.

          • CannonFodder@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            Fyi : google translates to : "
            Look to hell and get away! That’s not a dog, that’s some kind of thing! That’s imitating a dog, it’s not real! Get away, you idiots!"

  • There are types of Tenet watchers

    One who doesn’t know what the fuck is happening.

    And the other who doesn’t want to admit that they don’t know what the fuck is happening.

    Then there’s Christopher Nolan laughing at us, because he made the movie as confusing as possible, because one upon a time, he witnessed someone committing the horrific sin of watching Interstellar on a 720p 4.5" Android Phone¹, so he decides to enact this revenge arc by making a movie in the 5th dimention that nobody but his 5d brain can understand.

    ¹Yes I did that 👀

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I watched Tenet while sick in bed on my phone. Some people are traveling backwards through time. there’s a conspiracy. some ex soviet dickhead wants money.

      it’s not worth MAKING THE PANDEMIC WORSE YOU PRETENTIOUS TWAT

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      3 days ago

      Idk, Tenet didn’t seem that complex to me?

      If anything, it’s decent at hiding things from you at first and then providing explanations later. And if you watch again, some things suddenly make more sense now that you know about the inverted people.

      At the end of the day, remember that temporal pincer movement that they explained in the part in Tallinn? Where you send people in both forwards and backwards into some point so one group has information from the other (or it’s the same people going into the same time multiple times)? The whole movie is temporal pincer movements encompassed within each other so there’s shorter periods of people going inverted, but also longer ones - towards the end they go several days if not weeks inverted so they can go back to when Sator’s on the boat with his wife around the same time as the attack in the “Kyiv Opera House” (actually filmed in Tallinn City Hall) at the beginning of the movie.

      I’m sure there’s details I’ve missed, and for sure I don’t remember the exact order of each inversion and what happened exactly when. But broad strokes, it’s easy to understand and doesn’t take a superior 5d brain at all. My average ADHD brain can handle it.

      • 4grams@awful.systems
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        3 days ago

        It took me three viewings but I was finally able to follow the plot. I honestly loved it.

        I watched the first time and was utterly confused, but I was sure there was a narrative that I just wasn’t following so a couple weeks later I watched it again. This time I figured out the mechanics of the plot but I did lose the continuity. So, I watched it like 2 days later and literally took notes (like 3 sentances, not an academic study), and was able to follow the entire plotline.

        Probably doesn’t sound like fun to many, but for me it was an ideal movie watching experience. It provided the experience Inception promised but never lived up to (I did enjoy it as well, but it was not challenging to follow).

        • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          I had the luxury of watching it twice in a week (was visiting family for Christmas that year, not a ton to do around the house but watch movies), and I thought that it was a really satisfying film to watch over two viewings. It’s definitely an interesting artistic choice to make a movie that benefits from a second viewing, and I can see why that turns people away, but I really enjoyed it.

      • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        It’s not complex; it’s convoluted. That’s how Nolan works. It’s a good thing that he’s a great director, because he’s a terrible writer.

    • MBech@feddit.dk
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      3 days ago

      The second time I watched Interstellar (The first time being in the cinema), I paused the movie as they launched the rocket, went and bought a surround sound system because I had a pretty good paycheck that month, and resumed the movie. Haven’t regretted it a bit.

    • Damage@feddit.it
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      3 days ago

      sin of watching Interstellar on a 720p 4.5" Android Phone

      I wached it on a plane’s entertainment system, I’m not even sure it was 720p, I used the airline’s headphones and there were no subtitles.

    • backgroundcow@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      (Spoilers, obviously)

      Nothing confusing about TENET at all, huh? In the very first scenes a guy gets reverse shot by a bullet embedded in the side of the stairs of an opera, and the bullet is “sucked” into the muzzle of a gun, and the ugly hole in the stairs goes away.

      In our forward moving time: what is the origin of that hole? When did it appear? Has it been there since the opera was built? Did the people building these stairs do that with a big ugly hole in it, possibly with an embedded bullet? If not, where and when did it come from?

      The thing is, the whole premise of forward+backwards moving things sharing the same reality falls apart if you stop to think about it for a minute.

    • happyfullfridge@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      It wasn’t confusing but the logic of its mechanics weren’t consistent. I think some people thought there was logic to follow, hence the confusion.

    • chris@l.roofo.cc
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      3 days ago

      I could follow just fine. I just found it a not very good movie. It was convoluted for the sake of being convoluted.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          2 days ago

          I said that after watching it.

          The sci-fi element really didn’t add anything to the story it could have just been a fun blockbuster action flick and it would have worked fine.

          • bless@lemmy.ml
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            2 days ago

            But then it would be any other film, not a Christopher Nolan one ;)

            • chris@l.roofo.cc
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              2 days ago

              The movie was Christopher Nolan saying “Look how hard I can Christopher Nolan this movie. No one has ever Christopher Nolaned so hard.” At least for me.

    • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      3 days ago

      Conceptually, sure. But the last big setpiece made no sense from a visual perspective. I feel like you would need to show an overhead view of the map simultaneously, to actually keep track of what was happening.

    • tetris11@feddit.uk
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      3 days ago

      Yeah that scene where he’s needlessly fighting himself made complete sense. If you see yourself coming up to you with an intent to fight a battle you’ve already fought, confront yourself nevertheless as it’s way easier than just showing your identity.

      BWAAAAHM

    • Thirsty Hyena@lemmy.world
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      I have always found it weird whenever people say they don’t get TENET, Inception or Interstellar on their first watch. I thought the plot were simple enough to understand.

      • 2xar@lemmy.world
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        Right? They were pretty easy to follow. So easy that I’ve noticed about a dozen plotholes in them. Maybe these plotholes were confusing people, because they thought there would be a good explanation to them, that they are not getting. Nope, there aren’t. They are just full of plotholes.

  • Katana314@lemmy.world
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    When this happens to me, I think it’s a bit of a mental decision between “They’re going to explain it, it’s meant to be mysterious now.” and “They explained it poorly”.

    Biggest pet peeve is when the plot centers on one key character that people only talk about, and you never see. Or when one key piece of information is muttered in a heavy accent during five other things happening.

    I of course love the former. I’ve been burnt by the latter many times, like “Oh, I should’ve rewound the movie.”

    • TrooBloo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      The scene in question is the opening scene of the film. It is fully explained pretty early in the second act. Definitely intended to be the “mysterious” option in this case.

  • aaaa@piefed.world
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    Oh yeah then explain Tenet

    Magical machine can make time work backwards.

    Is it really that hard to explain?

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      No Tenets problem is that you can’t hear it. So it’s somewhat complicated plot is even more difficult to follow.

      • [deleted]@piefed.world
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        Momento and The Prestige might be the exceptions, where the execution did match the ideas. I enjoyed the Batman movies, but they certainly have their silly moments and some major plot holes that can be glossed over because of the source material being comic books.

        But he has certainly leaned really far into the style over substance and over time the characters take a backseat to the point that by TENET no character interactions had any weight or tension and they just ran around and did silly stuff that made no sense.

      • DefederateLemmyMl@feddit.nl
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        3 days ago

        Christopher Nolan’s ideas are all: imagine this story, BUT get this: the timeline is fucked.

        That’s every single Nolan movie.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          Time travel movies either need to be not really about the time travel. Or all about the time travel.

          In the first instance the time machine is basically just a plot device. So you can have the story set in mediaeval Europe or 5,000 years in the future or whatever. E.g. The Time Machine, Doctor Who, Bill and Ted’s excellent adventure. This is the most common depiction of time travel.

          In the second case the time machine is almost a character, e.g. Primer, and the plot of the game Quantum Break. It allows people to have access to abilities that other people in the story do not have, and fundamentally changes what is possible for those characters.

          But Tenant isn’t either of those two, it’s a third option which I don’t think I’ve ever seen before where the time machine basically just rewrites the rules of the universe. Everyone knows about the pseudo time travel, but not really time travel technology and so no one really has any advantage over anyone else. So it ends up just being a John Wick style action movie where everyone has access to time travel, so it kind of cancels itself out. It’s really unclear why the technology even needs to be in the story, or what it adds to the story.

          Christopher Nolan has a bit of a tendency to make complicated movies, and he seems to think that that’s the same thing as making good movies. Sometimes that works like in Inception, and other times you get just a weird complicated mess that doesn’t really have anything to say for itself.

          • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            My cousin made a movie that was ostensibly about time travel, but the kicker at the end was that it was a group of people fucking with a rich person to make them think time travel was possible in order to scam him. I hated the movie until the ending because I think time travel is such a worn-out and lazy sci-fi trope.

          • ZMoney@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            My favorite part of that movie was the last half hour where they’re just like “fuck it, we’ll just get special ops guys to shoot everything.”

      • blueduck@piefed.social
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        3 days ago

        A linear story is split in two parts.

        The black and white sections explain Leonard’s backstory and show that he’s willing to lie to himself to be happy just like his wife was willing to lie to him because she was unhappy.

        The color section is revealing the consequences of Teddy using Leonard, but also Leonard’s willingness to lie to himself.

        The special edition DVD had it recut in a linear fashion. It works both ways… linear is a standard detective story without much depth. Recut, it’s a compelling story about Truth and consequences

      • [deleted]@piefed.world
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        Just watched it two days ago, all of the explanations were dumb.

        “Friction is reversed” and “The people are reversed but the cars are not” and the whole backwards oxygen thing was all entirely stupid nonsense because they always applied to one thing but not anything else that would be similar and related.

        • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          “Remember: you’re reversed - your car isn’t.”

          Literally the next scene

          Car window frosts over because it gets set on fire

          I stopped trying to make sense of the internal logic at that point. The fight scenes were interesting, but at the cost of immersion in the story. Not to mention - the acting/dialogue is entirely bland plot points spoken at the audience as much as the other characters.

          • [deleted]@piefed.world
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            3 days ago

            I think there was supposed to be a love connection between the protagonist and the blonde lady but I literally couldn’t tell if it was supposed to be romantic or some kind of stand in for someone he lost, like how main characters often save someone because they lost someone.

    • bless@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      It’s not hard to explain, but boy do some people find it hard to get

    • Lauchmelder@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      exactly, their explanation of the backwards-in-time-travelling bullets started making less and less sense as the movie went on

    • BruisedMoose@piefed.social
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      My wife is a pretty even keeled person. Tenet made her visibly angry and to this day, I have to consider her current mood before I mention it.

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      3 days ago

      Given that a defining characteristic of time is that the universe will move from an information-filled organized state towards increasing chaos as entropy increases, maybe the whole movie is moving backwards through time?

  • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    I had a friend once who, if I’d seen a film and they hadn’t, would ask me questions every few minutes throughout the movie about things it was foreshadowing but hadn’t fully shown yet. If not being omniscient is that painful, run to the bathroom, read the plot summary on Wikipedia, and come back – ruin the film for yourself on your own time.

  • village604@adultswim.fan
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    3 days ago

    My wife is the worst about asking a question during a movie or TV show that gets answered within like 30 seconds of her asking. We call it pulling a [wife’s name]

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      I am familiar with the move. and from now on I’m going to call it “pulling a wife’s name”

    • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      I love that kind of stuff. Both me and my wife do it, then we theory craft. We try to guess twists before they’re revealed.

      This obviously doesn’t work well without subtitles.

  • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Tenet isn’t terribly difficult to explain, though it’s been too long since I’ve seen it for me to do it now. I remember watching it and being able to say, ok, it’s not airtight, but I know what Nolan was trying to do with the movie at least. It’s a very interesting idea, but while the execution has a normal amount of plot holes, they’re exacerbated by a story that uses what seem like plot holes as a story device.

    It hurts our brains because effect is preceding cause, and because most sci-fi stories with time travel use it in the same way as they might use a space ship: to travel to a different place that has only tangential effects on the main location (even though they may make a big noise about the Butterfly Effect, in reality it’s rarely that severe) or to make nonsense shenanigans happen (things that have no basis in logic from any direction). Tenet actually did come up with a really interesting concept, and tried to give it interesting stakes, but got distracted by the shiny of “backwards bullets” and so let the logic suffer.

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    Tenet reminds me of the game Braid.

    Braid is a platformer where you can reverse time on demand. At first it seems so easy. Just reverse time any time you make a mistake. But then you encounter items that don’t get reversed in time. At first this seems like an annoyance, but you have to learn how to utilize this odd behavior to advance in the game. It’s a clever mechanic that’s difficult to fully grasp.

    It turns out that having some things exempt from the normal flow of time gets really complicated.

  • FishFace@piefed.social
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    3 days ago

    Yes but sometimes I miss that information or it’s obvious to other people and not me. So sometimes, I ask my partner.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      My ex used to do this. We be watching a film, and then she’d start playing with a phone, then she would look up from her phone after about 10 minutes and say, “what’s happening”. I still maintain that there is no more of an aggravating personality trait.

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        Nope, I’ve got one worse: My father.

        Watching a movie. A character is introduced.

        My dad: Oh look who that is, it’s Fleeg Fleegerson. He was in, ooooooh, that movie with Heeb Leebert and Dick Tickle where the bad guys hold an airliner hostage as a misdirection for robbing it? Sky Hard? Yeah. And he died in the sequel. His dad used to be John Wayne’s shoe shiner’s understudy, married Cla Cla Rodrigruez, Fla Fla’s sister. You ever seen any of Fla Fla Rodriguez’s movies? She made 445 films between the age of 5 and 11 as the singing dancing child thing that didn’t get a real upbringing or childhood and they starved her so she’d stay short and it messed up her bones, and they gave her a gallon of laudanum a day for the pain, and then once she grew up she got typecast as a femme fatale in noir movies. She died in 2009 of huge pox, I hated to hear that.

        Also my dad: So now where are they going?

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            It’s amazing how many times I’ll rewatch a movie and go oh he was in Star Trek. I don’t know actors.

            Then you get the odd actor like Bill Nye (not that one) who’s just in everything, and you don’t notice because he’s so imbued the role.

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          This is partner. It’s like a tic. It’s actually amazing to watch. It’s like they become possessed by the spirit of cinema and start babbling about the most obscure trivia you’ve ever heard.

          Fortunately, I love it.

      • FishFace@piefed.social
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        Well that does sound annoying. I don’t fuck with my phone during a film except to look up actors, so I am more talking about garden variety stupidity.

    • aski3252@lemmy.world
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      Sure, but the scene is the first scene of the movie. There is nothing you can miss.

      Except of course if you know anything about the movie or what it is about, but then it should be kinda obvious why they are shooting at the dog…

      • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        Or if you speak Norwegian. They’re yelling spoilers the Americans can’t understand.

  • buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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    Everybody talking about Tenet and I’m just here wondering when the hell there was a theatrical screening of The Thing that I missed. 🫤

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    Reminds me of my grandmother’s famous cry… in waking up at random times during a movie or TV show

    "is he dead yet? "