Trouble on the Second World is a great movie of all kinds



Diversity is not all science fiction. Its existence has not been proven, of course, but it has a theoretical basis in real quantum science. The wave function (the mathematical model of a quantum system, which can give the probability of when a particle can be found) is said to “collapse” after a definite measurement. The “many-state interpretation,” developed by physicist Hugh Everett, instead suggests that when a quantum system is measured, everything feasibility studies are carried out in many countries.

Compare with Cat Schrödinger’s thought experimentitself originated from the concept of quantum measurement; If you stick a cat in a closed box, there’s no way to tell if the animal is alive or dead, so technically, it’s both.

Experts have noticed how seeing the world in this way leads to feelings of anxiety; as individuals and as a whole group of people, we value our uniqueness. If any acknowledgment of “we” exists in one form of life, that distinction is dissolved. This is the root of Owlman’s nihilism, although he defines reality as a branch based on human choices, not the behavior of particles (ie. and a human-driven story).

“Every choice we make has no meaning because somewhere, on this same Earth, we have already made a different choice. We are nothing. Less,” explains Owlman. His analysis is not wrong, as such; It’s cool and clear under some lenses. But you have to be very passionate about saying that this makes people’s lives “pointless” – which Owlman is, so he wants to destroy the original “Earth-Prime”, thinking that this will cause the rest of reality to collapse. “The only thing that a person can do that can have any purpose,” he calls this, because destroying all reality is the only choice that cannot be made differently in another world.

Woods gives an interesting performance as the Owlman; gentle and evil, in contrast to his famous voice role as the talking Hades in “Hercules.” On the other hand, “Crisis On Two Earths” would have benefited from casting Kevin Conroy as Batman again, instead of the uneducated Billy Baldwin, because this would have given Batman and Owlman an already successful battle.

I can hear Conroy delivering Batman’s lines to Owlman clearly in mind, especially his farewell: “There’s a difference between you and me. Both men gave up, but only one succumbed to it.

Owlman character and A bad Batman, yes, but it’s deeper than normal to have the Dark Knight as a villain; He is the embodiment of Batman’s character of will and determination, that one person can make a difference. Owlman would rather destroy everything than have the “illusion of free will,” while Batman sees the whole world, dark and light, and tries to make it better with the belief that others, even his enemies, can. to be good. If there’s anything that “Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths” teaches us, it’s that, after all, it’s only us, our choices.


2025-01-20 04:00:55
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