
Hey, just for fun, consider this - the refreshingly intelligent “Coherence” employs the exact same MacGuffin as one of the stupidest, overrated cult “classics” of all time - 1984’s “Night of the Comet. If you have an affinity for mind-bending riffs on quantum physics, youll enjoy 'Coherence.' Most of these types of stories take the concepts of quantum mechanics (entanglement, superposition, etc.) which exist at the most microscopic-level (electrons, particles) and posit that similar effects could. I’d recommend this to sci-fi fans looking for a unique, dialogue-driven brain-buster. Written by Repo Jack on November 4, 2020. (I myself … mostly kept up with it - I was sometimes a little murky about the strategies adopted by the group to address their predicament.) And it’s a wonderfully intelligent “what-if?” story that other reviewers have compared to “The Twilight Zone” episodes. I don’t even want to name which “science” serves as the basis for the “science fiction” here, as that would be a big hint as to what transpires. I really can’t write much more than that without spoilers - even this movie’s central story device is best arrived at as a surprise for the viewer.

#COHERENCE 2013 MOVIE#
The movie portrays eight friends at a dinner party who find their sense of reality frighteningly altered after a comet flies overhead. And the result is pretty impressive - this a trippy, unusual, and unusually cerebral science fiction thriller.

Soon it becomes clear that nothing and no one are what they appear.

James Ward Byrkit wrote the screenplay for “Coherence” (2013), then filmed and directed it on a shoestring budget in his living room. Coherence (3,200) 7.2 1 h X-Ray R In this mind-bending sci-fi thriller, 8 friends at a dinner party start experiencing strange and mysterious events on the night a comet is passing close to Earth.
