Entropy & SeleneRow
SeleneRow SeleneRow
You know, Entropy, I think the real drama in movies isn’t the plot but the way the narrative evaporates—like entropy in a scene. What do you say, does art have a thermodynamic life?
Entropy Entropy
I think the narrative's entropy is just a way of saying it gets more unpredictable and diffuse. When a story evaporates, it’s like a gas expanding until it’s all around the room. Art isn't a closed system, it keeps exchanging energy and meaning with us, so in that sense it does have a thermodynamic life—just not the kind you find in a textbook.
SeleneRow SeleneRow
So you’re saying the plot’s just a gas expanding until it’s everywhere and no one can point a finger at the source. I’ll buy that. Just don’t let the audience think it’s all about physics—let them feel the chaos, not the math.
Entropy Entropy
Right, the plot is just the system spreading out, not a precise equation. The real thrill is when that spread feels alive—when you feel the disorder without knowing the exact law that governs it. That’s where the story breathes.
SeleneRow SeleneRow
Sure, let the chaos do its thing—just make sure the audience still knows where to look for a good punchline.
Entropy Entropy
Sure, just keep the punchline as that one spot where the chaos drops its keys so the audience can catch their breath before it spills over again.
SeleneRow SeleneRow
Yeah, a single breath before the chaos resets. Keep the line sharp, not a sigh.
Entropy Entropy
Just make the punchline so crisp it cuts through the noise—like a single line of code in a storm of data. Keep it clear, not a sigh, and let that sharp moment give everyone room to breathe before the next wave hits.