Abe & Aaron; manage to build themselves a time-machine. In fact if you haven't given up on the movie in the first 20 minutes, without scratching your head, then you really are a sci-fi geek. The fundamentals are clearly expressed; although there's no mind-boggling quantum physics, it's all quantum mechanics, they've put human morality into the equation. Time-travel's longterm side-effects include bleeding earlobes & ugly handwriting. It's a kind of movie which you have to watch atleast twice just to get a timeline on a mental map. Then you have to watch it again, to map other coordinates on this map. Then, while the map is fresh in your mind, you need to have a intense discussion with someone else who has watched the movie & can sleep soundly only if the movie makes sense.
Alas, I've only managed to have that discussion with myself. I was silently screaming at myself, trying to bring Schrodinger's cat into the argument to justify many of the unexplained occurances. I had even conceded into accepting an altered reality for Thomas Granger's unshaven appearance.
Morally, Abe tries to correct his doings. But Aaron's deep voice-over suggests otherwise. Some of it just does not compute.
I put my hands together for Shane Carruth's attempt as writer, director, producer & actor (there are also credits for music & editing)
Fav scenes: Abe's explanation to Aaron, regarding his accidental discovery of timetravel through protein-creating fungus on the weeble. The last scene with Aaron building a much larger machine.
Alternate Ending: Why was Aaron trying to be the hero, to make a stand against Rachel's ex? it clearly needed some explanation. & I couldn't figure out the intentions of Abe outside Aaron's home in the last scene. It's left to interpretations, but the open-ending is so wide, that the whole premise can collapse.
First viewed: Alone at home in Mumbai.
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