I'll be very disappointed if it turns out to be a drug-induced dream, and at the end we find Caviezel strapped to a hospital bed in the deepest basements of his former company.
Moving the story to a desert setting increased the sense of isolation, I thought. The sense that there's no one around but you. In that case, I would ask them how they explain the different races and accents within such a small population.
The addition of children makes it a little scary. Those kids in that investigations class were completely warped.
I'll be very disappointed if it turns out to be a drug-induced dream
Yes, or some sort of shared virtual world, a la the Matrix.
Moving the story to a desert setting increased the sense of isolation, I thought.
The desert setting is wonderful, and heightens the surreality of it all. I keep wondering if this is going to have some 9-11 connection, given the ghostly glass towers looming in the distance and the fact that Caviezel's character is from New York.
I would ask them how they explain the different races and accents within such a small population.
That, and the different accents.
The addition of children makes it a little scary.
The addition of children makes it terrifying, IMO.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-17 07:44 am (UTC)I will say this: visually, it's quite interesting.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-17 02:04 pm (UTC)Moving the story to a desert setting increased the sense of isolation, I thought. The sense that there's no one around but you. In that case, I would ask them how they explain the different races and accents within such a small population.
The addition of children makes it a little scary. Those kids in that investigations class were completely warped.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-17 05:17 pm (UTC)Yes, or some sort of shared virtual world, a la the Matrix.
Moving the story to a desert setting increased the sense of isolation, I thought.
The desert setting is wonderful, and heightens the surreality of it all. I keep wondering if this is going to have some 9-11 connection, given the ghostly glass towers looming in the distance and the fact that Caviezel's character is from New York.
I would ask them how they explain the different races and accents within such a small population.
That, and the different accents.
The addition of children makes it a little scary.
The addition of children makes it terrifying, IMO.