Review of Scream (1996) by Mariel33 — 29 May 2017
Scream's code is that the creation of peace is created by the creation of difference. Created peace isn't peace, and the balance is the creation of difference twice. Original peace isn't possible, as the universe isn't the original state of reality; however, the replication of the original state of reality is possible, and the 1996 horror film seems to be an example which applies.
The creation of the creation of difference is the creation of different difference. Different difference isn't difference, but is a type of presence that needs to be created. This type of presence will then mean the ability of replicated peace.
Type of presence isn't type or presence; it is the absence of type and presence. Type is presence, which means that the replicated peace needs the absence of a replicated presence, or the absence of a replicated type. What is a replicated type? Type means trees and houses, or knives and buildings. So perhaps Scream is the need of a replicated tree or barn to become absent. Not the original tree, but the replication of the tree needs to become absent, and then the ability of the tree will become present.
The ability being present is the absence of the reason of the ability. No reason means the ability, and so Scream's philosophy appears to be that value is design having no reason.
But is that true, or logical? Should it be right that the value of a design is predicated on the design having no reason to exist? If a design is wallpaper, or a Ghostface costume, the wallpaper or costume having no reason means no presence of the wallpaper or costume, therefore neither the wallpaper or costume are able to have any value in the first place.
The value of the wallpaper is its absence because of no reason. In the movie Scream, the wallpaper not existing because it has no reason is its value. Yet the source of the understanding was presence, so the philosophy of Scream is that the presence of value is a fallacy. Value means bias, meaning that the wallpaper not existing because it has no reason to exist is its bias.
This review of Scream (1996) was written by Mariel33 on 29 May 2017.
Scream has generally received positive reviews.
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