So I am basic, thanks @chaoswillcalmusdown for tagging and sorry for disappointing 😅
In no particular order (also there are way too many albums that I like, so I chose them randomly, not to mention that I am old, and it’s obvious by these covers):
Shakira “Oral Fixations, Vol. 1”
Nirvana “In Utero”
Mumford & Sons “Babel”
Arctic Monkeys “Favourite Worst Nightmare”
2Pac “Me Against the World”
The Cure “Disintegration”
Kid Cudi “Entergalactic”
Frank Ocean “Blonde”
Joy Division “Unknown Pleasures”
Pearl Jam “Ten”
Idk whom to tag, I wasn’t here for way too long, so basically anyone who wants can join. @brightokyolights ? 😅
a lot of reviews seem to focus on the sci-fi aspects, the fact that there's a war against A.I. and saying "this is a glimpse of what our world could be" without any hint of understand that this is what the world already is
sure, there's no war against A.I. but i think the more important part of the film is the depiction of U.S. imperialism and the wanton destruction and murder the U.S. military leaves everywhere it goes. in there muerderous quest to destroy all A.I. in revenge for something that was actually a human error, they murder thousands of innocent humans, adults and children alike. U.S. imperialism doesn't care how many it leaves dead, as long it achieves its objective.
to many people around the world watching this movie, where American missiles are launched at distant targets with no regard for who they kill, this film will be saddly familiar. over here in the imperial core, we have no idea what it feels like to be helpless in the face of such cruel destruction, but hundreds of millions of people around the world do.
so, like all good sci-fi, this wasn't a look at what the world could be if we let A.I. keep developing, but a look at how the world already is because we let the U.S. military industrial complex run amok