MovieChat Forums > Glitch (2016) Discussion > modern conveniences

modern conveniences


Paddy didn't blink one time at modern devices. Yeah, he was annoyed about the casino machines in his pub. Otherwise, he didn't even blink at cars, electricity, the cell phone, the dirt bike. I couldn't tell what time he was actually from, because the US and Australia may not coincide, but i was guessing late 1800's.

The only person who seemed to react, somewhat, was the world war one kid. Charlie? Can't think of name. He was touching the lamp. He was surprised there were two world wars. He looked up when a commercial plane flew overhead. Yeah, they had airplanes in WWI, but not the big silver/white planes we have now.

If noisy giant metal things were all around, and I'd never seen a car before, I would be freaked out. Not sure I would just jump in one.

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Yeah and the girl who was murdered, she said she loved a particular song and you find out later her boyfriend was jailed 18 years. Unless those teens were into oldies but goodies, that, too, was way off. Sloppy writing. At least spend 5 minutes off someone from 100 years ago reacting. But then everyone barely reacted to the dead coming back to life.

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The song - it was a remix of a song from Bill & Ted's excellent adventure. I can't Break Away by Big Pig. came out in 1989... If this is when she died - he would have gotten out of prison around 2007-2008?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDtAgi31zIc

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She died in 88 but even if it wasn't a remix of the 80s, I wouldn't mind her liking a newer song as the difference in music/taste from 80s & today is not as wide a gap as say the 80s & 50s like in Back to the Future.

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Thank you for posting about this, because this definitely irritated me. When Kirstie (sp?) was in denial that they were all back from the dead, my first thought was "LOOK AROUND YOU!" Geez. All of the modern amenities should've had them all spooked and confused, like Charlie was when he was touching the lamp. The only person that I could understand not being too affected was Kate, since she had died only two years prior. But as for everyone else...especially Paddy, having been dead since the 1800s...I was expecting a much more obvious "wtf" reaction regarding the time period they were in. Definitely a considerable oversight on the part of the writers!

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A huge oversight. Really, really sloppy. Maybe they felt they couldn't get everything in and couldn't take the time to write 5 minutes of people reacting in wonder, curiosity, or fright.

Even people getting out of jail are confused.

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Once we found out more about his personality, it seemed to fit to me. The contrast between this "great" man and his statue in town versus the war hero and his




lover's


statue in town was great.

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The war hero's statue was not of the war hero, it was of his homosexual lover. Maybe you knew this already.

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The two things are not mutually exclusive. He was a war hero AND Charlie's lover.

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But it wasn't who they thought it was. They thought Charlie was a hero, that's how history recorded it.

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I thought about this multiple times throughout the show. Also regarding how they acted/spoke. I just suspended my disbelief.

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Yeah that was odd , Paddy should have been so disoriented that he shouldn't have been able to function


Even Kristie should have been in amazement at smart phones and the Internet.

Also it seems no one had heard of Google in the show, lots of questions could have on Charlie and Paddy it seems could easily be online as they were historical characters, even Maria and Kristin's likely had obituaries online.

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Kirstie died in 1989, and Maria was born in 1931 and probably died in her mid 40's so even if she was 45, she died in 1976....so no, they definitely would not have obits online.

Did they really see smart phones and the internet? They were in the surgical center at first when most of them didn't even remember their names, and then at the barn, I think all they had was a TV, which most would know what that was, despite looking a bit more modern, but really, before today's flat Tv's, they really hadn't changed THAT much.

Paddy did marvel at Beau's phone and asked what it was. Yeah they could have gone into more detail about them not knowing what things are, but given the whole season was only 6 episodes, they had more important stuff to deal with. Plus, I think their overall confusion and disorientation right away kind of covered it all.

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I have pondered on this too. I think it could be because at first they have no clear memories of who they are and how they died. If you take the scene where John is looking at an aeroplane, the doctor asks him if he has seen one before and he says that he can't remember.

The thing that bugs me more is people's reactions to seeing the dead back alive, like Sarah and the other policeman when they see Kate again. I'm sure in real life people wouldn't just accept that they have risen from the dead. I know I would be thinking that she must have staged her death or something.

But apart from that mild annoyance, I still think it's a good show and can't wait for season 2. I certainly rate it higher than The Returned, which was just a snooze fest.

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I guess James had motivation to try and hide it because he was afraid for his wife, the doctor I was wondering about till near the end.


But for some of the dead.. I'm sure Kristin's parents are around but she hasn't tried to contact them.

You think the deputy would have called the press right away.

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Just a word on kristin's past, when they read her gravestone it only said something about "beloved sister" and they only showed her and her sister in a picture in that murder file. If im correct that is. I just got the strong hint that she didn't have parents for whatever reason even when she died.

I read this in a chola accent.

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The thing that bugs me more is people's reactions to seeing the dead back alive, like Sarah and the other policeman when they see Kate again. I'm sure in real life people wouldn't just accept that they have risen from the dead. I know I would be thinking that she must have staged her death or something.


And they always confirm it either by asking questions or by the returned offering information nobody else could know. How long would you be unable to believe before you accept the obvious truth? When all reasonable options are eliminated, the only option that remains, however insane, must be the truth.

The new home of Welcome to Planet Bob: http://kingofbob.blogspot.ca/

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I was also disturbed by Paddy's use of the F-word. (Not to mention other colloquialisms.)

If he died in the 1860s, even if he was the mayor with the foulest mouth in antique Australia, that wouldn't be rolling off his tongue like he's stepped out of a Scorsese movie.

It seems to me it would ground the show in its "reality" a lot more if they paid attention to character details like those.

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Just because they don't recall being dead doesn't mean they weren't "present". There's a deus ex machina loophole that could allow them to pick up modern things while in the "spirit world" and not recall that they were actually dead.

Then again, maybe they are dead now, and this is how they enter the grave. This is their purgatory, which explains why they cannot leave (Hotel California tune..)

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I see no reason that's unrealistic. Curse words weren't invented in the 20th century by any stretch of the imagination.

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My top 250: http://www.flickchart.com/Charts.aspx?user=SlackerInc&perpage=250

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You are absolutely wrong. You don't seem to be aware of history in general, much less the history of Australia.

The new home of Welcome to Planet Bob: http://kingofbob.blogspot.ca/

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You should watch Deadwood then and the use of colorful language on the show to reflect is setting and characters.

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And then there's the fact that they all speak modern Australian.

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I thought that Paddy, despite being the first mayor of the town, being buried in a normal cemetary next to regular people would be odd. You think he would have been buried at his vast estate..hmm

*********************
Conservatives hate what people do -- Liberals hate who people are.

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He was murdered by his own son. I don't think they were concerned with honoring him with anything after death.

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Actually, Paddy speaks with a very clear Irish accent.

What exactly do you define as "modern Australian" anyway?

The new home of Welcome to Planet Bob: http://kingofbob.blogspot.ca/

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That's rather pedantic of you, isn't it?

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Truth be told each "zombie" could have a series unto itself. There's enough to cover so that all the fascination scenes have to be limited else it encompasses the entire show. Seeing 3 or 4 people totally fascinated for half the series wouldn't work well. Same with people realizing dead people climbed from the grave. Sarah has the best reaction of all, which would really take days, weeks or maybe years to get over. You'd suddenly realize that death isn't permanent, that religion is wrong in many ways, and you'd want to be as far away from it as possible. I'd leave the area, I don't care who climbed out of the grave.

WWI guy was fascinated by the lamp, but not the vehicle he climbed into. Paddy had no problem realizing a modern window opens by sliding upward. He knew how to operate a beer tap. Him finding that will still in that dress in a fireplace is simply bad writing. The fires built in that thing in that many years would have long ago burned everything to a crisp, and can you tell me not one time did a chimney sweep clean that thing? It would be a nightmare.

I can never recall names, but the main character's emotional range doesn't include surprise and disbelief.

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if the show were to include their fascination with modern things it would end up being about nothing else. Why waste time on it

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Him finding that will still in that dress in a fireplace is simply bad writing. The fires built in that thing in that many years would have long ago burned everything to a crisp


You're aware it was kept in a metal box right? It was never directly exposed to flame.

The new home of Welcome to Planet Bob: http://kingofbob.blogspot.ca/

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There were cars and lamps during ww1, no idea why he was so amazed by it.

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