Welcome to my website. Here you will find my site all about the Lucy Movie
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_(2014_film)
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2872732/fullcredits
- Life was given to us a billion years ago. What have we done with it?
- Opening lines
- I feel everything. Space, the air, the vibrations, the people, I can feel the gravity, I can feel the rotation of the Earth, the heat leaving my body, the blood in my veins. I can feel my brain. The deepest parts of my memory.i wish you can feel the same.
- Speaking to her mother on a phone, as she has a doctor operate to remove the drug packet from her body.
- Learning's always a painful process. Like when you're little and your bones are growing and you ache all over. Do you believe I can remember the sound of my own bones growing? Like this grinding under the skin. Everything's different now. Like sounds are music that I can understand, like fluids. It's funny, I used to be so concerned with who I was and what I wanted to be, and now that I have access to the furthest reaches of my brain, I see things clearly and realize that what makes us "us" — it's primitive. They're all obstacles. Does that make any sense?
Like this pain you're experiencing. It's blocking you from understanding. All you know now is pain. That's all you know, pain.
Where are the others? The others carrying the drugs. I need the rest of it. For medicinal purposes.- To Mr. Jang, as she extracts from him the knowledge of where the other packets of CPH4 are.
- I can start to control other peoples bodies. Also I can control magnetic and electric waves, and — not all of them, just the most basic — television, telephone, radio. … I don't feel pain, fear, desire. It's like all things that make us human are fading away. It's like the less human I feel, all this knowledge about everything, quantum physics, applied mathematics, the infinite capacity of the cell's nucleus, they're all exploding inside my brain. All this knowledge. I don't know what to do with it.
- Explaining to Professor Norman some of her abilities as she reaches 28% of her neural capacities.
- We never really die.
- Casual response to Pierre Del Rio, when he states he doesn't want to die, as Lucy starts to drive his car against traffic.
- Every cell knows and talks to every other cell. They exchange a thousand bits of information between themselves per second. Cells join together forming a joint web of communication, which in turn forms matter. Cells get together, take on one form, deform, reform — makes no difference, they're all the same. Humans consider themselves unique, so they've rooted their whole theory of existence on their uniqueness. "One" is their unit of "measure" — but its not. All social systems we've put into place are a mere sketch: "one plus one equals two", that's all we've learned, but one plus one has never equaled two — there are in fact no numbers and no letters, we've codified our existence to bring it down to human size, to make it comprehensible, we've created a scale so we can forget its unfathomable scale.
- Indicating some of her perspectives on human concepts of measurement and distinction.
- Time is the only true unit of measure, it gives proof to the existence of matter, without time, we don’t exist.
- Summarizing her perspectives, as she prepares to reach 100% of her neural capacities.
- I AM EVERYWHERE
- Statement after reaching 100% of her neural capacities.
- Life was given to us a billion years ago. Now you know what to do with it.
- Last lines
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/lucy-film-hinges-on-brain-capacity-myth/
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