You know how, in time-travel movies, characters don’t want to change anything or else the future will get completely screwed up and bad in some unpredictable way?
I think that storyline paints a rather dismal view of our actions in the present. Because what it tells us is that our actions (for better or worse) will change the future in some completely unpredictable way — as if the universe is completely inscrutable, and the future doesn’t turn out for the better even if we think we’re doing something good. I had no idea Back to the Future was so existentialist.
But remember that in the end, he wound up changing the future in a couple of positive ways.
One thing you seldom see in these alternative futures who say “Hey, this is my reality. Why do you want to screw it up?”
Have you ever noticed in time travel movies, they always seem short on time. Like how if there is 5 minutes to save the world, but they need to travel to a different time got get hold of something, they spend 4 minutes getting that something and they travel back and only have the 1 minute left.
COME ON GUYS. You have a frikkin time machine. You could travel back, grab a couple Mohitos, chill out, and then return with a couple hours to spare without even breaking a sweat!
surly we could all benfit from going bk to the victorian times and warn them about global warming so we could all have a half decent summer instead of this god awful rain. typical english man all we seem to do is talk about the bloody weather sorry this is such an essay but couldnt stop writing anway will leave u with this. smile it confuses people. have a nice day