I could argue the point, but the lack of other response suggests that everyone agrees with you.
So it goes....
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It's a similar concept, but not really what we're talking about here.
I could argue the point, but the lack of other response suggests that everyone agrees with you.
So it goes....
![]()
Yes, it was called Monday.I think the X-Files had an episode like this too.
That did happen.
It had been 1999 for a century or more.
I wonder how their calendar played out?
I could argue the point, but the lack of other response suggests that everyone agrees with you.
So it goes....
![]()
That did happen.
It had been 1999 for a century or more.
I wonder how their calendar played out?
I used to envision that the Matrix was supposed to actually be our "real world" and that it explained some weird things like why we have deja vu, why everything tastes like chicken, and so on. In which case it obviously can't always be 1999.
I could argue the point, but the lack of other response suggests that everyone agrees with you.
So it goes....
![]()
Aw, but I was all ready for one of those pointlessly pedantic online arguments that ends with nobody happy.![]()
I used to envision that the Matrix was supposed to actually be our "real world" and that it explained some weird things like why we have deja vu, why everything tastes like chicken, and so on. In which case it obviously can't always be 1999.
These days it seems like the perception is different-- that it's a recreation of the world we know, but it's implicitly not quite the same. If you or I were projected there, we'd notice some differences. Little things, like the calendars always being 1999 (or the year blanked out), a green tint to the world, and people occasionally morphing into Hugo Weaving.And yeah, in that not-quite-real environment, they'd probably go through Groundhog Day all the time. So to speak.
There's the great book Replay by Ken Grimwood that I believe came out in 1988 that has a guy who dies at age 57 or something and 'wakes up' in college...reliving his life like "Groundhog Day" in that he knows what will happen...then he dies again in 1988 and is 'reborn' again.
Great book. I read it twice. I think.![]()
It also won the World Fantasy Award.
Sadly, Ken Grimwood passed away a few years later. As far as I know, he only wrote a few other books.
#76 "Twas the Night Before Mxymas" Dir. Mike Vejar Written by Tim Minear December 15, 1996I really liked the take on the concept in the Lois & Clark episode with Mr Mxyzptlk.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Lois_&_Clark:_The_New_Adventures_of_Superman_episodesWhen Metropolis is trapped in a time loop on Christmas Eve by Mister Mxyzptlk, Lois and Clark must defeat the imp before all hope is lost.
#131 EP.14 "Monday" Dir.Kim Manners Written by Vince Gilligan & John Shiban February 28, 1999 (1999-02-28) Prod. CODE 6ABX15I think the X-Files had an episode like this too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_X-Files_%28season_6%29#ep14The world is trapped in a time loop, and only one woman seems to know. Each day the events that happen differ sightly, "free will", as Mulder calls it. A bank robbery is committed over and over again until they can stop the eventual bombing of the place from occurring.
http://x-files.wikia.com/wiki/MondayBackground Information
According to writers John Shiban and Vince Gilligan, the inspiration for this episode didn't come from Bill Murray's 1993 comedy Groundhog Day, like most viewers would assume, but from an episode of The Twilight Zone called "Shadow Play".
Surprised no one's mentioned TNG's Cause and Effect.
There's the great book Replay by Ken Grimwood that I believe came out in 1988 that has a guy who dies at age 57 or something and 'wakes up' in college...reliving his life like "Groundhog Day" in that he knows what will happen...then he dies again in 1988 and is 'reborn' again.
Great book. I read it twice. I think.![]()
It also won the World Fantasy Award.
Sadly, Ken Grimwood passed away a few years later. As far as I know, he only wrote a few other books.
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