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after watching chou kaguya-hime and being disappointed with it but finding a certain aspect of the premise interesting, two good friends have suggested we should watch the film called rakuen tsuihou, so i think i'll do that!

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the very first minute of rakuen tsuihou is two characters having a conversation about how much it costs to render their 3d models and private servers. this movie came out the same year as the first release of vrchat. very promising!

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so the premise is there's a virtual world where people live (were their brains uploaded?) hosted on a space station, but someone's trying to hack it, so this girl has been materialised onto earth, now a post-apocalyptic wasteland, to find the hacker together with this cowboy

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we are barely half an hour into the movie where a cool cowboy with the same VA as kaiki deishuu gives a cold dose of reality to a girl who is getting to experience corporeality for the first time and god what a film

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for people who are only reading the thread, i should mention at this point that the hacker's motivation is to send (virtual) humanity out to explore the cosmos. also we get to meet said hacker. it's a film about competing transhumanist ideologies

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considering the premise, the people involved in its production, and the strength of the recommendations we got for it, it's not too surprising that I liked Rakuen Tsuihou

nonetheless: it was in fact a very good film

normally I wouldn't mention it, but: I appreciated the calm

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sometimes a great film is mostly just three people talking to eachother

this was a good palette cleanser and helpful confirmation we haven't lost our mind. meaning is not density of pretty images or ideas per minute, meaning is not runtime, meaning is not hard to keep up with

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