Fun fact; So, in the movie, the #backrooms creates entities based on the people who have been in the backrooms. Up until the table scene, Clark blamed everyone but himself for the issues in his life. And because of this, the backrooms created Clarks entity to see everyone but Clark as the enemy, causing Clarks entity to attack everyone but Clark.
It was not until after the table scene, when the therapist confronted Clark, telling him that he was the cause of his own issues, that Clark realised that he was the cause of his own issues. And because of this realisation, his entity now saw everyone, including Clark as the enemy, which is why it attacked Clark during this scene and not before
The deeper you go, the more the architecture warps— That’s what rumination does #Backrooms
For those who don't understand the Backrooms, this is something you should know: My Theory
📍Level 0 is the first time you remember
It’s empty because when trauma resurfaces, everything else goes quiet. No people, no context, just you and the memory on repeat. The hum is your nervous system stuck in fight-or-flight. The carpet is the mundane details your brain latched onto because the real thing was too much.
📍Level 1 adds entities. Those are the stories you tell yourself about what happened. "Maybe if I did X." "Maybe they meant Y." None of them are real, but they chase you anyway.
📍Level 2 is the office maze. That’s guilt. Endless identical rooms of "I should’ve, I could’ve." You walk for hours and end up where you started.
Think about this: Clark stops wanting to leave because leaving means accepting it’s over
And if it’s over, then what was all that pain for? The Backrooms give you a purpose: survive, map, find an exit. It’s easier than living in a world where the thing already happened and you can’t change it. So he stays. He even starts decorating
Him peaking around the corner and trying not to be seen by her was the scariest thing ever.
People wanted a standard guy to get stuck and go through 1000 levels, but this movie was FAR more interesting and eerie, I loved the concept of the backroom layers
#BACKROOMS@DiscussingFilm
@TimoTweetss That's what I'm loving about Black Flag Resynced; actual difficulty options and chain takedowns being vastly neutered has made it arguably the best combat the franchise has seen.
Watch YouTubers react to this scene and you'll inevitably find someone who whines, "Why didn't they see the dinosaur as they were driving up? Why did nobody hear it walking around until now?", when the point is to reveal the Brachiosaur to us as it's revealed to the characters. The awe and wonder registering in their faces so that we register the majesty of the moment. It's about selling the EMOTION, not the logic. That's just how movies work.
#SamNeill #JurassicPark
the thing is about black flag resynced, it’s really fucking good but it’s a remake, like every creative idea and writing, story, mocap is from old ubisoft, so we can’t really say they’re back sadly…
my theory is that the Clark copy isn't just a random duplicate—it represents the version of Clark the Backrooms came to understand: someone defined by the pain he causes others.
the turning point is when Clark lets the therapist leave and says they don't have to change. to me, that isn't him refusing to grow; it's the first time he stops hiding behind excuses and starts accepting responsibility for who he is. throughout the movie, Clark constantly projects his flaws onto other people instead of confronting them himself.
acceptance is usually the first step toward real change, and that may be exactly what the copy feared.
if the copy is made from Clark's worst qualities, then Clark choosing to face himself would threaten its existence. the more Clark changes, the less power that darker version of him has. that's why i think the copy killed the real Clark—not out of revenge, but to make sure he never got the chance to become someone different. #Backrooms
Its always been interesting to me how even though captain clark is the most violent still life to the point he scares other still lifes away, he has this face of perpetual sadness, kinda feels like a reflection to how clark portrays himself as victim even when attacking others