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WHAT THE BLEEP DO WE
(K)NOW!?
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Our brain is a fascinating machine constantly encoding and embedding imprints of memories, inherited memories, and past experiences in us forever altering our perception of life and ourselves. Whether or not it's a promotional film for the RSE, it does in fact offer alternate perspectives into our universe and minds that will scare many whom cling to their own beliefs. Is it so wrong to explore other views of life? Are we forever doomed to be content in our own world without exploring other's views of the world we live in? Regardless of how we view this world, we still live in it together, and promoting RSE or Ramtha didn't truly alter my expectations or viewing experience. We, as humans, have the ability to alter reality itself, yet we're still just insignificant dots, more of a microcosm for the bigger picture. And no, I'm not talking about god. But reality. So many million particles make up our very being, our very reality, it's utterly defeating to just subject ourselves to one thought process when so many possibilities await us. It's utterly defeating to sit down and not attempt to explore an event or significant occurrence and just pass it off as an act of god. Groucho Marx once said "I, not events, have the power to make me happy or unhappy today. I can choose which it shall be. Yesterday is dead, tomorrow hasn't arrived yet. I have just one day, today, and I'm going to be happy in it." "What the..." examines human responsibility and our ability to discover our surroundings and how we as dominant objects in this world have the chance to alter our reality and our surroundings without the help of an outside mysterious force. While some would view this as a spiritual film, I tended to view it more as an argument for reason and logic. And it's an engrossing look at such a concept.
She's a combination of both a discoverer who continues coming across these celestial figures teaching her about the properties of quantum physics while we gradually become more and more involved with her personal life as she attends her friends wedding, thinks back to when her husband cheated on her, dances and enjoys herself, and really just has no point to her presence. Matlin's performance seems like an attempt at real acting, but really her segments are really annoying, uninteresting, and just meandering from the actual topic that we should be focusing on. And just when I was sure it was appealing to logic, it begins sneaking in little tidbits of spiritual lectures, and our ability to be in a state of mind where we can ask a higher power for help during the day which was less insightful and more droning. It was almost like watching Manson speak. At first he's coherent and then he starts rambling which causes you to walk away.
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