The hero's dream?

Rosalee 2022-10-30 14:51:39

Since the story of the underground is being told, why are the hairy people still living on the ground and advertising on the ground? Isn't there a lot of people on the ground watching it? The motive of the heroine can be understood as taking the family property. But there are some doubts: 1. The male protagonist's girlfriend and the goddess have similar names, Anna and Nina; 2. The male protagonist in red pretends to be a dead watcher. The photos can be similar, but how can the palm prints of the access control be the same? Or is the woman who manages the access control also belonged to the goddess? 3 Why did Mao want to make the work of the monitor and the monitored person so similar? The man in red seems to work as an operator, and he also wears headphones to speak, but there is a back lens of the monitor, but no front lens of the video; 3 Hello Kitty, obviously the male protagonist's girlfriend likes it, and the house is everywhere, so the goddess The Hello Kitty bomb was also used; the whole thing starts when the male protagonist falls asleep at night, which means the beginning of the dream. My understanding is that these are actually the dreams or daydreams of the male protagonist. Dreams are projections of reality. Many bugs can make sense, and it also explains that the male protagonist is immortal, and the little people have to regain their glory through heroic feats. Of course, the directors of such films usually deliberately confuse the boundaries between dream and reality to show the effect of openness.

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Metropia quotes

  • Nina: [Introducing the gathered prominences at the financial report party for Roger Olofsson] Joseph Kemp, more vain than a sixteen year old girl, yuck, Cardinal of The Church of Climate. He's the guru for all the retarded climatologists.