@PenixBurton@dryhuh@Jushg5ve@SpindleSpice Show me you making more than $10k in a month bub.
You have your face nor your build posted anywhere.
You called me ugly, unathletic, and short all disproven you have nothing other than talking shit on the internet.
Hope life gets better for you! Wish you well.
Backrooms
A movie about an alcoholic spiraling into irrelevance who coexists with looping memories of his anguish until they become unrecognizable, and once he accepts the lie that he doesn't need to find a new path to a dead end in his life, and embraces the victimhood of his own narrative, he becomes the very thing he desires: a victim of his own narrative.
Loved the JCPenney magazine aesthetics of cheap 1990's particle wood era mixed with heirloom furniture of yesteryear.
Loved that eerie feeling of things being smaller than we remembered, and enjoyed the concept without any real commitment to answers about what the dimension actually is (other than an uncanny valley familiar low-poly count AI rendering of a simulated hallucination.)
What I love most about it is that it isn't really an intellectual property, yet. Alternate-dimensional labyrinths aren't something you can really own, so it's kind of a public domain genre, and in the age of Star Wars and Marvel, it's refreshing to think a new genre trend can be born that anyone can play with creatively.
Stranger than fiction, it leaves you with more questions than answers, and that is what liminal horror is... the unanswered unknown beyond the next shadowy corner, and the unsteady feeling of a life in a looping transition. If you watch it hoping for an epic conclusion, you'll be sorely disappointed. But if you go for the lore to say you were there in theaters... like Star Wars, or The Matrix, you very well could be taking your grandkids one day to ride the 'Backrooms Splash Mountain' in 30 years when Disney somehow buys the rights to interdimensional liminal spaces.π€£
@JP5049782282927@arXhiiipower@carinthecreek The backrooms is the plot bro π
It is the story, the world, and all the characters but remembered in the most jumbled way possible and that's cool asf.
If you can't immerse yourself in that, that's okay tho.
@JP5049782282927@arXhiiipower@carinthecreek Plot was sub-par?
Think it's a great way to describe how memories fade and turning memories into something eerie.
Slow?
They had to build the discovery of the worldyou wouldn't rush through that.
All over the place?
Everything made sense.
Did you watch it?