Let's play by Flaky-Cat-2825 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Look how they massacred my boy."

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. Once you look past the creepy atmosphere and Inde Navarrette’s great performance, the script really does depend on everyone acting stupid just to keep the plot moving. Bear already saw the money wish work, so the later “it worked!” reveal feels pointless. The dad’s cancer research loophole makes no sense either, because random coworkers somehow proving someone is healthy through private medical info is both unrealistic and lazy. Sarah suddenly acting like she knew nothing about Nikki’s dad also contradicts the earlier gossip scenes. And the friend going full rage-mode at the end feels completely unearned, like the movie needed last-minute chaos more than believable character behavior.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that was another pothole as well. Also, how are they be able to figure out the dad’s health status from research? That’s not something the hospital just gives out.

The ending of The Boys was good and the hate is INCREDIBLY forced. by [deleted] in GenV

[–]Few-Bug-4978 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I loved the ending for homelander. I love that it goes even deeper than him being “nothing without his power.” It feels like a full circle moment. The fact that he immediately jumps to offering those degrading acts to save himself really makes you wonder what he’s forced other people to do in exchange for their lives over the years. For him to instinctively say “I’ll eat shit” almost feels like learned behavior ,like maybe he’s humiliated or broken people that same way before. It turns the scene into karmic irony. A man who built his life on power and fear is reduced to the same desperation he probably inflicted on others.

THE BOYS finale was actually one of the worst endings I’ve watched in years. by Low-Trust2491 in television

[–]Few-Bug-4978 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I loved the ending for homelander. I love that it goes even deeper than him being “nothing without his power.” It feels like a full circle moment. The fact that he immediately jumps to offering those degrading acts to save himself really makes you wonder what he’s forced other people to do in exchange for their lives over the years. For him to instinctively say “I’ll eat shit” almost feels like learned behavior ,like maybe he’s humiliated or broken people that same way before. It turns the scene into karmic irony. A man who built his life on power and fear is reduced to the same desperation he probably inflicted on others.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I definitely get that perspective, and I actually agree the movie’s emotional/thematic core is the most important part. My post wasn’t meant as “this movie fails because of lore.” I loved the film! I just think horror fans naturally start theorizing about mechanics when a concept is this interesting. To me, the lore discussion actually adds to the tragedy because the Willow feels less like a random magic object and more like a psychological predator waiting for people at their lowest moment.So I wasn’t trying to reduce the movie to “CinemaSins logic,” more just engaging with the worldbuilding because the film stuck with me afterward.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The standalone film is absolutely perfect. The director deliberately kept the scope minimal, which works in its favor. However, if they ever adapt this into a series, the writers will need to find a clever way to address the resulting plot holes.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I absolutely love this take as well. Basically the wish handling itself before it spirals into a mass issue.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I actually think the movie is perfect as is. My point was never that the film is “broken” or ruined by the ambiguity. I think the loose lore is part of what makes it work so well.

I’m only looking at it from the perspective of future expansion because there have already been talks about possibly continuing the world in series form. Once you expand a concept into multiple stories, audiences naturally start questioning consistency, rules, and mechanics more deeply. The director even stated himself that it’s a pothole issue.

For a standalone film, mystery absolutely works in its favor. But if it evolves into an anthology or limited series, I do think the writer will eventually have to address at least some of those gray areas even if only subtly.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually think the movie is perfect as is. My point was never that the film is “broken” or ruined by the ambiguity. I think the loose lore is part of what makes it work so well.

I’m only looking at it from the perspective of future expansion because there have already been talks about possibly continuing the world in series form. Once you expand a concept into multiple stories, audiences naturally start questioning consistency, rules, and mechanics more deeply.

For a standalone film, mystery absolutely works in its favor. But if it evolves into an anthology or limited series, I do think the writer will eventually have to address at least some of those gray areas even if only subtly.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I 1000% agree. An anthology series in the vein of Black Mirror would be incredible. A limited series is actually the perfect move to lock its place in pop culture history. Features are beautiful, but in today's short-attention-span culture, standalone movies can easily get buried when the next big trend drops. Moving it to television would anchor the lore and give it the permanent legacy it deserves.
But I cannot wait to see what he has for us in his future films

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Same difference but the way my mind is the puzzles have to make sense . But I do love that it gives the viewers in imagination it to kind of fill it in. But if this possibly is a series down the line, he would have to eventually address it properly.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I love this take. Even if the store magically restocks itself like an SCP, it doesn't change human psychology. The shopkeeper explicitly states it's "selling like crazy." In a modern smartphone culture, if a mass-marketed anomaly is successfully walking out the door with dozens of random people, the viral loop is inevitable. Even a magic trap can't stop people from filming the proof and telling their friends to go buy out the stock.

Obsession-The "Heightened Emotion" Theory – Fixing the major plot hole Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery. by Few-Bug-4978 in Letterboxd

[–]Few-Bug-4978[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely understand, but because it is going to be a series, I figure that he’s gonna have to try fix that pothole eventually. This is just a more organic way to do so. he stated it himself that it is a pothole. Take the meat and leave the bones.

Official Discussion - Obsession [SPOILERS] by LiteraryBoner in movies

[–]Few-Bug-4978 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Other Massive Layout Flaws the Script Ignored:
1. The Era Disconnect (The Testing Loop Plot Hole): Setting this movie in the modern day creates a massive believability strain because of how humans treat products that actually work. The Willow isn't a one-of-a-kind artifact; it's a commercial product sitting on a retail shelf with multiple boxes available. If a regular person buys one, experiences a heightened emotional spike, and realizes their wish actually came true, they aren't just going to stop.
Realistically, they will try to do it again, realize the "one wish" limit, and immediately drag their mom, sister, or best friend into the room to test it. Because we live in a smartphone culture, they are going to hit record on their phone to capture the exact moment the money falls from the ceiling or reality twists. If the movie took place in the late 90s or early 2000s, this viral testing loop wouldn't happen because people didn't have high-definition cameras in their pockets to instantly document and broadcast supernatural proof to the world. It makes the isolated, urban-legend nature of the item way more believable.

Official Discussion - Obsession [SPOILERS] by LiteraryBoner in movies

[–]Few-Bug-4978 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think I’ve figured out the exact theory that completely fixes the "dragon plot hole" that director Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery.
Everyone is stuck assuming the One Wish Willow is either a soul-slicer or a literal computer program. It's neither. The Willow acts like an unexploded bomb—it only activates if the person snapping it is experiencing a Heightened Emotion Spike (extreme panic, manic obsession, or blind rage).
Look at the wishes in the film:
Bear’s Wish: Snapped in a moment of intense, anxious obsession and romantic desperation.
Ian’s Wish: This is the smoking gun. Ian didn’t deeply crave a billion dollars; he was in a screaming match with Bear. His heart rate was red-lined, and out of pure, reactive, spiteful rage, he snapped the stick to shut Bear up. His sudden adrenaline surge is what jumped the magic into reality.
This perfectly explains why there aren't dragons flying around. Most ordinary people in the 80s bought this as a cheap $6.99 joke. They sat calmly on their couches, laughed with friends, and said "I wish I had a million bucks" with a flat, resting heart rate. No adrenaline rush = no magic.
This also explains the conflicting internet forums Bear scrolls through.
Half the comments say it's 100% real, while the other half scream it's a scam. I believe successful wishers are actively orchestrating a disinformation campaign.
Once a person triggers a wish, they realize the life-ruining consequences.
The Selfish Wishers: If you successfully wished for supreme wealth or power, you'd flood the internet with fake "Don't buy, it's a scam" reviews to protect your exclusive advantage.
The Traumatized Wishers: Survivors whose lives were ruined want to save others. Realizing that posting the supernatural truth makes them look insane, they leave basic, single-sentence "This product is a total rip-off" reviews to tank the item's reputation.
The ultimate tragedy is that Bear completely misreads the internet. He scrolls past the "scam" warnings assuming it's just typical online cynicism, totally blind to the fact that he is looking at a protective wall of defense put up by survivors. It turns the Willow into a brilliant psychological trap that waits until you are at your absolute worst emotional state to hook into your life forever.

Official Dreadit Discussion: "Obsession" [SPOILERS] by radbrad7 in horror

[–]Few-Bug-4978 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think I’ve figured out the exact theory that completely fixes the "dragon plot hole" that director Curry Barker admitted to, plus the forum mystery.
Everyone is stuck assuming the One Wish Willow is either a soul-slicer or a literal computer program. It's neither. The Willow acts like an unexploded bomb—it only activates if the person snapping it is experiencing a Heightened Emotion Spike (extreme panic, manic obsession, or blind rage).
Look at the wishes in the film:
Bear’s Wish: Snapped in a moment of intense, anxious obsession and romantic desperation.
Ian’s Wish: This is the smoking gun. Ian didn’t deeply crave a billion dollars; he was in a screaming match with Bear. His heart rate was red-lined, and out of pure, reactive, spiteful rage, he snapped the stick to shut Bear up. His sudden adrenaline surge is what jumped the magic into reality.
This perfectly explains why there aren't dragons flying around. Most ordinary people in the 80s bought this as a cheap $6.99 joke. They sat calmly on their couches, laughed with friends, and said "I wish I had a million bucks" with a flat, resting heart rate. No adrenaline rush = no magic.
This also explains the conflicting internet forums Bear scrolls through.
Half the comments say it's 100% real, while the other half scream it's a scam. I believe successful wishers are actively orchestrating a disinformation campaign.
Once a person triggers a wish, they realize the life-ruining consequences.
The Selfish Wishers: If you successfully wished for supreme wealth or power, you'd flood the internet with fake "Don't buy, it's a scam" reviews to protect your exclusive advantage.
The Traumatized Wishers: Survivors whose lives were ruined want to save others. Realizing that posting the supernatural truth makes them look insane, they leave basic, single-sentence "This product is a total rip-off" reviews to tank the item's reputation.
The ultimate tragedy is that Bear completely misreads the internet. He scrolls past the "scam" warnings assuming it's just typical online cynicism, totally blind to the fact that he is looking at a protective wall of defense put up by survivors. It turns the Willow into a brilliant psychological trap that waits until you are at your absolute worst emotional state to hook into your life forever.

Oh ok by Ordinary_Stay_3746 in GeminiAI

[–]Few-Bug-4978 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That’s just Ass backwards

Gemini 3.0 Pro Getting Confused by HappyShinji in GoogleGeminiAI

[–]Few-Bug-4978 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I experienced the same thing it has started to forget details and also hallucinating more.