In the third scenario one of the students who has eidetic memory says she knows the entrance and exit code because of her seeing the professor type it in the second scenario, even though that scenario ended and a new one had begun.
When Georgina (Bonnie Wright) is about to re-cap the Ignorant Bliss Paradox, she turns her head to her left, supposedly looking at Utami (Cinta Laura Kiehl). The scene then cuts to a reaction shot of Utami, with her head turned to her right, looking towards the camera, and with a white-plastered wall in the background. There are two things wrong with this sequence:
First of all, Utami isn't sitting at the left of Georgina, but two rows behind Georgina on her right. So when Georgina turns her head to the left, she would be looking at Chips or Yoshiko, not at Utami; and when Utami turns her head to the right, she would be looking directly at the wall, not at Georgina.
Secondly, when Utami turns her head to the right, the background behind her head should show the side with the doors to the garden, and not the side with the white-plastered wall. This reveals that this reaction shot was filmed when Cinta Laura/Utami was sitting backwards (facing the rear of the classroom instead of the blackboard), in the same position as much later in the movie, when Utami is reading out the inside of her card during the second iteration, after the classroom tables have been rearranged.
First of all, Utami isn't sitting at the left of Georgina, but two rows behind Georgina on her right. So when Georgina turns her head to the left, she would be looking at Chips or Yoshiko, not at Utami; and when Utami turns her head to the right, she would be looking directly at the wall, not at Georgina.
Secondly, when Utami turns her head to the right, the background behind her head should show the side with the doors to the garden, and not the side with the white-plastered wall. This reveals that this reaction shot was filmed when Cinta Laura/Utami was sitting backwards (facing the rear of the classroom instead of the blackboard), in the same position as much later in the movie, when Utami is reading out the inside of her card during the second iteration, after the classroom tables have been rearranged.
Towards the end of the movie, when the students form a line to leave their textbooks at Mr. Zimit's desk, the sequence has been cut and edited to skip half of the students, and focus only on James (who's first in the line), Jack, Vivian, Chips, Kavi, Georgina, Utami, Bonnie and Parker when they're approaching the desk, in that particular order. However, when James and Jack are standing at the desk, it is clearly seen in the background that Kavi is actually standing fourth in line (right behind Beatrice, who's third), and later when Kavi is standing at the desk, it can be seen that Vivian and Chips are standing behind him in line; even though the sequence order makes it seem like Kavi came at the desk *after* Vivian and Chips did.
In the bunker where they lock the teacher behind, he dies from radiation poisoning. He is then later eaten by predatory dogs/wolves.
Any creature large enough to feed on a human would have also died from the exact same radiation poisoning long before it ever got the chance to eat his body.
Even the lower radiation would have killed it on the surface if it'd had been living underground.
Any creature large enough to feed on a human would have also died from the exact same radiation poisoning long before it ever got the chance to eat his body.
Even the lower radiation would have killed it on the surface if it'd had been living underground.
A single person needs about 550 liters of pure oxygen per day, so 10 people for 1 year would require over 2 million liters of oxygen, which could never be provided by the few small tanks that the teacher says will supply all the oxygen.
Perhaps intentionally, the student summarizes only a portion of Plato's Cave, not the entire allegory.
The teacher measured the radiation and also mentioned it as an "atomic attack", so it is questionable that it would be enough for one year to achieve the half-life of the radioactive material in question.
In the second scenario, one of the students is voted out because she has been exposed to Ebola and they worry that she will infect them. While it's true her slot will be wasted if she dies, Ebola is not highly contagious, and they could easily isolate her for a reasonable incubation period to see if she lives. If she is well nourished and hydrated, she has a good chance of surviving even if she is infected.
One of the students is gay and wants to know if there is another gay student in the 20-person class (not in the scenarios.) He says that statistically there "has" to be another. Even at the most generous statistical incidence, the odds are less than even that there is another gay student in the group.
This is not a goof. According to the most generous study results, the incidence of same-sex attraction is estimated to be greater than 10% . Based on that statistic, Jack calculated that the expected number of non-heterosexual (or non-"exclusively heterosexual") people among the other 19 students would be (at least) around 2 : one boy and one girl.
This is not a goof. According to the most generous study results, the incidence of same-sex attraction is estimated to be greater than 10% . Based on that statistic, Jack calculated that the expected number of non-heterosexual (or non-"exclusively heterosexual") people among the other 19 students would be (at least) around 2 : one boy and one girl.
The eidetic memory of her fictional character can't tell her details like the exit code from another iteration.
In the second scenario, the opera singer's third condition is that she will get throat cancer in 3 years. Thought experiments are based on things you know at the time to make a decision. No one could know that they'll get throat cancer in 3 years, so this is not a valid condition for a thought experiment.
In the second scenario, the opera singer's third condition is that she will get throat cancer in 3 years. Thought experiments are based on things you know at the time to make a decision. No one could know that they'll get throat cancer in 3 years, so this is not a valid condition for a thought experiment. Same thing applies to the Senator that "would become" the first female supreme court justice.
It is difficult to conceive of even a few worthy nuclear targets in Indonesia, let alone dozens, and there is definitely nothing at all worth nuking in the vicinity of Mount Bromo, which sits in the middle of a desolate plain called the "Sea of Sand".