Spoiler: revelation about this clip...
After I posted this toot and clip, I realized that this particular clip has much more significance than I had realized.
Obviously, for those who have seen the film, the voice-over dialog by Sonmi is about her becoming "woke" about her own oppression and her potential. However, what I hadn’t previously realized is that this particular point in the film is a narrative midpoint, about which the film pivots, presenting a mirror between the first half and second half of the film. The first half introducing the six separate but similar sub-narratives, while the second half mirrors the first, but resolves those initial sub-plots in a reflective manner. The dialog itself hints at this, “Knowledge is a mirror, and for the first time in my life I was allowed to see who I was… and who I might become.” Sonmi’s character is acting a transient meta-metaphor for the film itself – realizing what the (first half of) the film is and what it will become.
This film is amazing. You can take as far as you want...
@Pat Damn! That's so true. I love that movie. You sound like me when I was breaking down Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind after first watching it.
Yeah, that was a deep one.
Can you post your critique here? (On mastodon, not necessarilly in this thread.)
Spoiler: revelation about this clip...
**** SPOILER *****
I just watched a youtube video review of this film and the reviewer also noticed that the Sonmi character was speaking about the film itself, except they saw it in another scene. When the interrogator asks, “And what if no one believes this ‘truth’.”
Sonmi replies, “Someone already does.”
In the narrative, she is referring to the interrogator believing her truth. But the youtube reviewer saw this as also referring to the audience believing what the film is offering, with the Sonmi character again speaking for the film.
Now I wonder if there are more instances of that character being a metaphor for the film. Obviously the presentation of her philosophy is the overarching message of the film, so it makes sense. I guess I’ll have to watch it again…