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Comments

Austin Stratton

Haha you cracked me up at the end lmaoo 'Take out the baby, kill the animals' 🤣😂

Michael K

I would turn someone in if faced with this situation, even my own wife. I wouldn't say that right away of course as a desperate person might then kill me. I would say I'm going to help and then get the police on the line at the first opportunity. Sorry if some find that harsh but the loved ones of the dead person deserve to know the truth.

Anonymous

Haha “busted by a guinea pig”, love that. You can just feel her guilt throughout, makes me feel ill!

Georgia

such an underrated episode - one of my faves!

Sam

This was set in Iceland which is volcanic. The place she dumped the guy's body would have been a geothermal energy plant so she dumped him in a water tank not a sewer.

Josh

I always wondered where this one was set - thanks!

Anonymous

A great episode and one of my favourites, but I do question the validity of a guinea pig being able to identify her. We were previously shown that the process for memory retrieval involved verbal communication and specific memory triggers. I also doubt that a guinea pig's mind, intelligence and memory would have the capacity to recognise a stranger's face and recall it accurately. None the less, it's a great episode on the whole.

Saul

The absurdity of the hamster/guinea pig twist was almost worth the incredibly grim setup. A hard watch, although Andrea Riseborough's an interesting actress who plays interesting characters. She was good in a recent sci-fi film called Possessor - very Black Mirror-y in its premise, assassins who can inhabit other bodies in order to get close to the target. She was good in this. The memory retrieval device, and the way you can chain memories by connecting certain parts of their recall with other parts of other people's memories, and leap from one mind to another and basically recapitulate everything that happened to pretty much any degree you want(you could theoretically just keep chaining and aggregating data and end up with as highly resolved and expansive a model of the past as you want, especially if you can include the memories of creatures like hamsters lol)...I'm not sure why but it reminded me of Blade Runner's 3D photo analysing tech, which, if you think about it for any amount of time, would allow you to see anything that happened at that point in time pretty much anywhere, because of the ways that light bounces off surfaces and the way that images can be upscaled. There's a guy called David Deutsch who points out that writing 'hard sci-fi'(ie. sci-fi that's genuinely scientifically possible) is really, really difficult, because the laws of physics/chemistry/biology/etc are very precise. If you try and push against one part of them you find that just changing that one small part completely breaks a whole slew of other parts, because things are so interconnected. That's why 'hard sci fi' kind of misses the point IMO. It's not the science that's necessarily interesting about sci-fi - it's the ideas. And for a great idea, like the idea of combing through memories to triangulate what actually happened, it's okay to sacrifice a lot of scientific plausibility. I like it when they try to keep things credible, but I don't want it to affect the story and the drama, and the ability to explore cool ideas.