this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2026
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I don't disagree, that is the more direct way to understand the scene from uh... like a perspective of 'what is happening, why is it happening', in relation to how the plot functions and progresses.
But if you go a bit deeper, into 'why is the author having the plot work like this, why has the author used/created this kind of a character, what, if anything, is the message or lesson or moral they are trying to convey'... I guess my first comment is how I answer those kinds of questions.
Writing a plot that makes sense and is at least logically consistent, possible/plausible, that's one thing.
Another thing is to do that, but in such a way that the specific plot beats, character decisions, they're all designed to ultimately convey a more complex idea by illustrating an engaging scenario that demonstrates it, as opposed to just directly stating that moral or lesson.
Of course, media analysis/critique is always subjective.
I just didn't preface my entire first comment with 'Well, I think that...' or 'In my opinion...', partially because I am autistic and tend to be blunt, but also partially because it comes across as more certain and confident, and is thus slightly more convincing, rhetorically.
So that right there is me trying to demonstrate my kind of analysis of author intent... on myself.
Makes sense, I overall agree, I'm mostly just unsure about the idea of a "snap", "break" or gaining self awareness, as opposed to something more passive. It's been a while since I saw the movie though and I didn't read the book so I can't make much of an argument about it.
Oh I'm not trying to say that the book/movie is trying to say everyone will go through a kind of violent psychosis upon gaining enough self awareness... just that its a potential.
Kinda like stochastic terrorism... stochastic psychopathic terroristic burnout?