Monday 1 August 2016

TOMORROWLAND

 Continuous encounters with authors who think negatively of readers—and people—whose imagination, not fancy, is wanting and limited has  a serious implication than the mere joy of condescension, disregard for exertion amongst others. To demonstrate the significance of this scenario, a mightily compelling situation is unveiled. The more gratulating the better.

  It is not a secret that the future is shit. But what future when is already here—a linear timeline based on the drone attack to the NASA premises. The vanguard of routine are started by insinuations that explain an externality in a harmonious world. Confirmation of such advancements at the expense of all upheld as unconfoundable rights is met with articulated fate. Today it is in various forms—the biggest, bureaucracy. There are others, but the impactful of future-world books detailing—mostly society's failures—the unfolding predicaments have been aligned with an optimist idea of the innings around fixing.

  Not much will rely on the version of existence one wants to dwell on; feeding the dark descent or propelling the hindsightfully hopeful—in a time when the rules of robotics have since been long surpassed. Perhaps the fourth rule would have fallen in place to account for omnidirection—morally, compassly, all else. We may want to think of anything alien as what exists beyond this world, technically rending other dimensions thus to the current world. A world less in harmony with itself is far more unhinged to idealize with a different envisioning of itself. Engagingly, almost paradoxically—nullified by countless timelines—manipulating a future to change the past offers the film's closure and glimpses of redemption.





  Meager is when a few of the best suited converge to create a better world. There may have been Arcadias, but Utopia is only a human idealization. It can never be realized. Every approach has its failings, with nothing but to follow the most convenient. Tommorrowland will only always be a tachyon, the vehicle by which to see either side—past and future—as the basis for manufacturing destiny. Not a specific future.

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