Like the Linda who traveled from Saturday to Sunday, the Linda who travels from Friday to Sunday also is aware of Jim's affair. It is already odd that Linda displaces her own consciousness when she leaps to other days, whether past or future. We need to find a way for this history to confirm itself, which normally is accomplished when the same person leaves from the same time to the same time. , A classic example of British humor is the awkward situation a hero finds himself, A low-budget film by Lee Whannell, who became famous for , If you like good acting and a completely non-trivial story, below we will tell, Explanation of the meaning of The Butterfly Effect, pinterest.com Horror thriller A Cure for Wellness Mount Verbinski is one of, If T.Kays film had been released not in 2011, but during the Soviet era, Premonition Ending Explained & Plot Summary, The Platform Ending Explained & Plot Summary, The Matrix Resurrections Ending Explained & Film Analysis, 7 Movies With British Humor, Smart Comedies with Meaning, Upgrade Ending Explained & Plot Summary, The Butterfly Effect Ending Explained & Film Analysis, A Cure for Wellness Ending Explained & Plot Summary, Detachment Ending Explained & Film Analysis. She goes to bed with him that night. She does not need to travel to Sunday, however--the Linda who traveled from Friday did everything she needed to do on Sunday and on Wednesday. Tuesday: doctors appointment for daughters injury; Wednesday: Jim gets into trouble; Thursday: news of the death of her husband; Saturday: funeral. That night she goes to bed, and just as she does in later timelines she leaps forward to Wednesday. Why did the days lose their chronology? The bird is a harbinger of something unpleasant. The husband did not wake up Linda. That Tuesday is uneventful; again, there is no visit to Dr. Roth and corresponding glass door accident. She leaps from here to Saturday. In The Lake House, Sandra Bullock's character saves the man's life and destroys time. Exhausted by experiences, Linda is not able to figure out where the truth is, where the unreality is. He swings by the insurance company and increases his coverage to thrice what it was, and then when he is on the highway he changes his mind, calls Claire to cancel their tryst, then calls home. Here we might be able to presume we are safe. She yells for the girls, and then sees Bridgette run through the glass door--not something she anticipated, because this was not the reality in the future she knows. She would probably expect to hear something from him by Thursday night--if there is not a message on the answering machine saying he made it safely she'll probably call his cell phone or possibly his hotel room sometime that evening. Does she love Jim? These little reminders nag at her. She awakens in her own bed with the knowledge of the week that passed, all of which she experienced out of sequence. The Linda so possessed has neither clear memories of what happened (she has no memory of having been at the accident) nor, as in Butterfly Effect, does she have the sense of blackouts--she does not say to Annie that yesterday was Saturday and suddenly she awakens to find that it is Thursday, but only that the week sped past the way ordinary uneventful weeks do. This is unlikely. The events of Thursday are confused, and although she spoke with Annie before she heard that Jim had died, no one is going to be surprised that she had some trouble remembering details of Bridgette's accident after she heard about Jim's. The events of their lives changed; they became the people who lived a different history It is not different for the time traveler: if Linda changes the events that form who she is and what she knows, then the only version of her that still exists is the one who is and knows what she caused herself to become and learn. Both daughters are on swings in the yard. That gives her more hope and more incentive: if she can persuade Jim not to have the affair, he might not make the trip, and might not be killed in the accident which she does not know she causes. There is an awkward aspect to this. She might wonder if it were a dream, but she won't reduce her effort. She probably does open the wine to have a drink before bed, leaving the glass in the same place. In grief, she falls asleep, and in the morning she discovers that everything is fine with her husband.
So Linda goes to bed in her own bed on Saturday night. It makes no sense for her to remember events which never happened. The presence of an inner voice is inherent in many. She will see Claire Francis for what for her is the first time, and pursue her, to the confusion of Claire. We must pursue replacement theory for answers. The events of Sunday have not yet fully impacted him. She is starting to suspect several things, including that she's losing her sanity. At the reception, she shares her visions. Leaving from Saturday, Linda now arrives on not Sunday but Tuesday. Perhaps when she is introduced she says, "I know" (she did that with the funeral director on Friday), and that gets a reaction from Claire or Jim (who is already off balance by Linda's pressure on Sunday) which sparks an idea which, combined with Jim's unwillingness to cancel the trip, gives her the necessary suspicion about the pending affair. It only becomes a problem if Linda replaced the glass on Wednesday, but in this timeline that Linda came from a future in which there was no such accident, so she will be unaware that the door is broken unless she happens to see it as she rushes out of the house. This makes the story risky, because if the reason for the trip is erased the trip is erased and the consequences of the trip are then erased restoring the reason and creating an infinity loop. When history changes again, and she spends the night at the hospital, they drug her, and it is likely that she will fall asleep yet sooner, making her trip in time. Linda feels she needs a doctor. Was it not her body behind the wheel of the car when her other self witnessed the accident? Before that can happen, though, Linda will learn on Thursday about the accident she caused on Wednesday, and on Thursday night she will travel back to Monday. She has no reason to visit Claire Francis, although she might go to the insurance agent Doug and learn that the policy values were increased. Linda covers the mirrors and instructs the girls that they will not speak of the scars. Jim does not awaken her Wednesday morning, but takes the girls to school, and heads toward his business meeting and clandestine affair. As we unravel the first changed history, we hit a serious problem concerning what Linda remembers. Given that on the Thursday we see there had not been an accident, when new glass was installed after the accident would Linda not have been motivated to put more or brighter stickers on the door? It is a day that she has not yet lived, so in some sense she cannot be present in it. It brings her to that moment after she has brought the girls home from school when she is pouring pills in her hand contemplating an overdose. Her other self is not lying next to her; she is her other self. Thunderstorm outside. This, though, is problematic. However, based on what he reasonably assesses to be her hallucinations, he prescribes lithium, and she fills that prescription before she gets home. It is more likely that Linda will guess. Explosion. Now she again leaves from Saturday, but this time travels to Tuesday. It might not matter, though. Annie will probably tell her about the glass door accident, because Linda will see the scars in the morning and when she talks to Annie she will say she doesn't know what's happening. She looks for Dr. Roth in the phone book but finds that the page has been torn out. We then are faced with the question of when and how Linda discovers this. Also problematic is the broken glass door. The woman throws out the corpse. We are thus caught between three impossibilities, the one that she remembers events which her future self will perform using her body in the past (because clearly she does not), the second that she has complete blackouts in which she remembers nothing at all (because she does not report that experience, which would be something unsual), and the third that she remembers the events of a history she never experienced and which no longer exists.
He agrees, but it is evident that he does not do this. More problematic is the fact that Linda spills pills in the sink on Tuesday afternoon and finds them there on Saturday morning. That may also be why she travels back to Tuesday and not to Sunday--although again, we have the problem that not knowing why she travels at all we are only guessing as to why she does so when she does. On Thursday she is not possessed. Linda also would have been in there on Thursday and Friday, if not Wednesday, and since her mother helped put the girls to bed on Thursday evening and helped get them up for school Friday morning she, too, was in there. She gets in the shower with him--but he is in a rush to get to work. The heroes quarrel, lightning kills the crow from Lindas dream. Thus when she departs on Thursday night after learning of Jim's accident, it is the second trip to the past. We have the glass door accident because Linda is spilling pills in the sink when the storm hits. Again, though, we do not know whence nor why she leaves nor why she goes whither she arrives. When and how was it replaced? Although the biggest problem is the problem of the glass door accident, the focus of the film is on that predestination paradox, the fact that Linda causes her husband's car crash by trying to prevent it based on her knowledge of it. At the moment the storm hits, Linda is upstairs in the bathroom contemplating the bottle of pills she just picked up from the pharmacy, prescribed by Dr. Roth. This will have to be considered; we'll look at it next as we reconstruct an original history. While Linda's consciousness will travel from Thursday to Monday, that history is now resolved, and so it will also advance to Friday. Is Jim alive or is he crushed by a truck? The last night with Jim brought the woman hope for the future. It is not perhaps as urgently on her mind, but she realizes that Jim has taken the children to school and is about to leave for his trip. Of course, Monday and Tuesday have to pass to reach Wednesday, but these are fixed. The movie might be hinting at this resolution by virtue of the fact that Linda notices on Monday that she is washing the same laundry she washed on Thursday, as if the laundry basket had not been touched for three days. She obviously has the sense that she lived through those days, but does not remember or understand the events we saw occurring on them. As we reach the following Sunday, her consciousness catches up with itself. People around say that Linda drove her daughter to the clinic. That means we need a cause that gets Linda to cause the accident before she knows about the accident. Friday exists already, because in the original history she lived through it. The timing will be the same. So we need to be able to toggle the visit to the psychiatrist separately from the vehicular accident, which will have to be included in our ultimate solution. It has already been questioned whether she would realize she has traveled to the past, if she falls asleep Saturday night and awakens Sunday morning. She will probably open the coffin after insisting that he's not dead, but the concerns of the family are not yet raised to the level of thinking she needs professional care. However, the following Sunday does not yet exist, and will not exist until all the anomalies of this week resolve (to N-jumps) so that there is a single history of the week in which all causes and effects are found. I extend my thanks to Stephen and to Jim, both of whom contributed to making this possible; I also remind all that this site and I remain alive in part because of your support, through Patreon or otherwise. A woman hurries down the highway to the place where she saw the accident in her dream. For her, the history of the world includes that she lived the week out of sequence, made love to her husband on Sunday, visited a psychiatrist on Tuesday, could not prevent Bridgette from crashing through the glass door on Tuesday, caused the accident which killed her husband on Wednesday, learned about the accident from the sheriff on Thursday, confirmed on Friday that her husband had been on his way to have an affair, and attended the funeral, still in shock, on Saturday. Those are the events that actually happened in the only history of the world that remains; those are the events she, and everyone else, remembers. The sheriff brings terrible news to the house. The single biggest problem in the movie is the fact that on the Thursday on which our story opens, Jim has been killed in the car crash Wednesday which Linda caused but does not remember causing, but Bridgette was not injured in the separate accident with the glass door. She is concerned about her sanity. This, too, will feed into Saturday, but again that does not yet happen, because on Friday night, after having a glass of wine, she leaps back to create the final anomaly, possessing herself on Sunday. She laughs when he asks her to return the next day. Linda struggled. She awakens in the bed in which she fell asleep on the previous calendar day, wearing what that self wore to bed. Then she throws the phone book page into the waste basket. There are no Friday events. We had a similar problem in Hot Tub Time Machine: Linda does not travel bodily to other moments in time, but rather her spirit or consciousness or soul possesses her body, bringing with it knowledge she has gained from other times. She does not mention the pills, nor ask whether he knows her, and does not recognize him. The laundry would not be on the line had it never been washed at all. We should also mention that the second anomaly created by her first departure from Thursday to Monday, the week she skipped leaping from Monday to Saturday, raises the awkward question of why she would leave from Thursday of the CD1 history (created by her first trip from Saturday back to Sunday) when she did not leave from Thursday in the AB1 history (the original unaltered history in which no one arrived from any future). Bridgette runs through it late Tuesday afternoon, and Linda and Jim are together at the hospital with her until evening, too late for a repairman to install new glass. If he is not going to leave her, he is not going to tell her about the tryst without some serious reason to do so. It might be argued that the Linda to whom Sheriff Reilly reports the accident remembers the Wednesday of the week in which the accident did not happen. Yet she meets Sheriff Reilly when, distracted, she nearly has an accident herself. Thursday is again the day we see, in which she is told of the accident (but Bridgette is not injured). The Linda who puts stickers on the door is not aware that there was an accident, unless she is also the Linda who arranges to have the glass replaced sometime on Thursday. She receives a message from her husband with words of love. It may be that at this point her commitment drops out of the story. This works, and she explains to him how she twice has had the very real experience of being in the future, a future in which her husband has died tragically. On the chest of drawers is a glass of wine. Linda has a premonition of something terrible. Linda has now caused the accident, and Jim is dead; but since she did not travel back to Tuesday she did not see Dr. Roth, and Bridgette never ran through the glass door.
Before we examine that history, though, we should cover a few of the peculiar points about this film's approach to time travel and what Linda experiences when it happens. There is one other question here: what happens to Linda after the accident? There are no cuts on Bridgets face. So perhaps she starts to become suspicious on Thursday. That would not happen if she were not yet home, but there is no obvious way for her not to be home after school. There is also a serious problem of memory. There are pills in the sink. So the stickers are less of a problem than the glass: when was it repaired? Given time, she recovers, and moves to another home. On Saturday, she is possessed by the self that came from Monday. These, though, are the problems with the most impact on the temporal analysis. Declarations of love, a night with a beloved man Linda finally understands how valuable her husband and daughters are to her. She might stay awake most of the night, collapsing before dawn. And its Wednesday. Such a cause is plausible here. In order for Bridgette to have received injuries on Tuesday and have the scars on Friday, there must be a Thursday on which she is scarred. Thus she has had a busy day. This would seem to undo her trip to Sunday, which would unravel the history so far. Linda is driving home where Bridgets accident occurs. The shock is so deep that the heroine does not want to believe in reality. (Interestingly, the actress was indeed given a tetanus shot, as she injured herself during filming). Even if he has decided to leave her, it is going to take a few weeks to get everything arranged, and one tryst does not make for a long-term commitment.
Before Linda causes the accident she already thinks she is having problems and so brings Dr. Roth into events before the accident. I thank those of you who are patrons and those who contribute in other ways. It is more probable that on Tuesday and Wednesday the girls wore the clothes that were washed on Monday, so they had to be washed again on Thursday. On Monday, she is possessed by her consciousness which came from Thursday. On the other hand, she does not appear to have the kind of Butterfly Effect blackouts experienced by Evan Treborn, in which she experiences gaps in time. Had she not visited Dr. Roth, she would not be standing in the bathroom holding a pill bottle when the storm struck. When she realizes that she is in the wrong point in time, she will still think it worth the effort to make sure that what she perhaps imagined happened does not happen. The problem with this is that it leads to a future in which Jim was killed but Bridgette was never injured, and we know that in the future the glass door incident was part of history. Jim shows his wife the new house. Even then, Linda is trying to change the future and decides to invite Jim on a trip. Although she will see and approach Claire Francis, Claire has never met nor seen her before, and will not speak of the conversation they did not yet have on Friday. Indeed, it appears to do so on the map, and the slight north/south displacement between its ends would make it seem silly to think otherwise. She spots it in the wastebasket. If we work backwards from the accident, we know that there are no stickers on the glass because Linda does not put them there until Thursday. That means that the Linda who awakens the following Sunday morning has to be the one who lived through the week in its final form. She awakens where she fell asleep Thursday, pulls the calendar from its hiding place, confronts Claire, makes funeral arrangements, and has a glass of wine before bed. Where is the unscarred Bridgette, or the Jim and Claire who had the affair? She pressured her husband to think about the love he has for his family, and seduced him when they went to bed. He did not call Claire to say he couldn't do it, and he did not call home to leave a cryptic message about some conversation that in this history never happened. Female cry. When she awakens on Tuesday morning after having fallen asleep in the hospital Saturday night, she confirms that there are no marks of the injections she received. She spent the day here and there--the first "here" being a trip to find Dr. Roth, followed by a stop at Jim's office. It is not unresolvable. She is at that moment a Linda who does not know that her husband had an affair, because he did not--he was killed in a crash before he got there. On the Wednesday we see, he cancels it; but that Wednesday follows from the Sunday on which Linda pulled out all the stops, shot the whole wad, trying to get Jim to connect with her and the girls. But the mirror shows sad eyes and an indifferent look. On Friday she is possessed by the self that just came from Tuesday. A kaleidoscope of disparate dream events leaves Linda depressed. This time it looked as if she was going to destroy time by killing the man; but that proved to be too hasty a conclusion. Her consciousness then leaps to Friday. He prescribes the drug she says she found. Jim drinks morning coffee. The complete analysis of this is extremely long and complicated, and includes at least these complications: This trip is not without complications. There might then be one more mistake--perhaps some article of Claire's clothing winds up in Jim's suitcase, and when Linda finds it and confronts him, he is too guilty to talk his way out of it. She then leapt forward to Wednesday and, unaware of any accident, pursued Jim to mile marker 220 on U.S. Route 57 West, and had him turn around to come home. She speaks of it in the ordinary way in which we say that an uneventful week went quickly, with nothing particularly memorable to mention. Where is the meaning? The annoying part is that the signs indicate that U. S. 57 runs East and West. But now the woman is sure that her duty is to save her husband. We are set up for the Thursday we see in the film. She will not be the least surprised at Bridgette's injuries, because she saw them on Thursday. That suggests that the change in our day occurs because she does not visit the psychiatrist. In the first history, she learned of the affair, and she is upset and probably will not go to bed, or to sleep, very early. Alternately, it would not happen if the laundry was not on the line. On Tuesday, she is possessed by the self which has just come from the day of the funeral. If it is a fixed time, then we assume the fixed time does not change. Jim is headed to work, and thinking of that cute new assistant manager Claire Francis with whom he anticipates a dalliance later in the week; he mentions her as he is getting his breakfast together. There are a couple of fragments that are annoying for various reasons. When she leaps back to Monday, she brings her awareness that Jim is going to die; when she leaps forward to Saturday she does not remember the glass door accident which happened Tuesday. It was daunting enough that I wrote a sixteen-part series, realized that due to one mistake in detail it was completely wrong, then scrapped it and wrote a replacement series, as follows. Wednesday morning Jim leaves early and takes the girls to school, and Linda rushes out of the house in pursuit. We never see that part of the day, but only this reconstruction makes sense. Thus Linda can't get confirmation. But it is inevitable. The only issue is whether she will go to sleep later if she is leaving at that moment or a time measured from that moment. If the only errand she ran was picking up the girls, though, then she would have been home most of the day. Bridgette is covered with recently stitched cuts; the younger Megan denies that they exist, and neither girl will tell her how it happened. She is a widow, holding a family photo. Nothing Linda does on Monday has any significant impact on history. The complicating fact is that we do not know when she departs. If on Saturday she has determined that her husband has had an affair, by the next morning she may have decided that she is going to fight to keep her husband. The problem is, Jim is going to have that affair. She supposes it must have been a very vivid dream, which also included the fact that the glass door had to be replaced and Bridgette was covered with freshly stitched wounds. Linda sees a pretty blonde. As to whether southern Texas ever looks like the Hanson homeland seems unlikely. We are told that the house has one and a half bathrooms, and that's the one with the shower (and presumably tub) so that's the one the girls use for bathing and probably brushing teeth and other getting ready for bed or school activities. When Linda travels from Monday to Saturday, she creates a Friday in which she does not exist; yet it is only her spirit that does not exist, her body being present. That is, if we assume that time travel of the sort the movie uses is possible, the story becomes possible if it follows the path outlined in our series. She can't find the Lithium bottle, and looks in the trash for the phone book page, but finds it in the book and tears it out. When she awakens and realizes it is Wednesday, she wants to prevent both the affair and the accident, so she performs the same actions as when she wanted to prevent the affair. The best guess is that she leaps forward into oblivion. This Linda arrives on Monday morning, knowing of the accident but not of the affair. Yet she still gets to bed on Monday night, and then leaps forward to Saturday. Trying to prevent the accident and bring Jim home safely, she causes it. After the injection, the poor thing falls asleep. She again finds Jim alive, and hugs him. In the particular case of Premonition we have a version of Linda Hanson who on Saturday discovered that her husband had had an affair, then awoke on the previous Sunday. This time she recognizes mile marker 220, and so panics; but she still wants him to turn around and come home, and the difference between her original coaxing and her panicked insistence does not prevent the accident. Although this would resolve the problem, it is not really a plausible variant.
All movies have such quirks, of course. She is still confused about Jim's death, and there will be a scene at the church when she insists on seeing the body.
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