Extended Reading
  • Alta 2022-04-20 09:01:03

    In-depth analysis of "Memento": memory is a deduction

    For a moment, if you want to know what kind of experience amnesia is like, then watch Nolan's "Memento".

  • Jana 2022-04-20 09:01:03

    2007.9 "Amnesia Fragments" film review

    From the various details of "Amnesia Fragment" to see the narrative structure

     

    "Amnesia Fragment" is a work written and directed by Christopher Nolan in 2001. The entire film is like a roll of film that has been carefully cut into sections and re-pasted in reverse order. Such a narrative technique...

  • Maximillian 2022-03-23 09:01:04

    An interesting attempt to break the connection between the signifier and the signified, and made an extremely interesting article on the relationship between memory and evidence. A masterpiece of brain science movies. In addition, the ending is really good. On the one hand, the male protagonist is used twice, on the other hand, he is actually lying to himself...

  • Ariane 2022-03-20 09:01:04

    [A] Those kids who say Nolan’s movies are brain-burning are either grandstanding or they really don’t have their brains to watch it. What is commendable about this film is not the so-called "brain burn" at all, but the satisfaction of the accumulation and analysis of information in the process of watching the movie, and the satisfaction of knowing the answer at the last moment. In this regard, Nolan is unsurpassed. (Oh, there is another question. Who instructed Lanny to tattoo the phrase "Don't answer the phone"?)

Memento quotes

  • Sammy Jankis: [after being shocked] What the fuck?

    Doctor: It's a test, Sammy.

    Sammy Jankis: [flipping him the bird] Test this, you fucking quack!

  • Leonard Shelby: It's just an anonymous room. There's nothing in the drawers. But you look anyway. Nothing except the Gideon bible, which I, of course, read religiously.