Time, Consequence, and Closed Loops : Looper
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This episode dives into Looper, Rian Johnson’s acclaimed 2012 time‑travel thriller, through a conversation recorded at San Diego Comic‑Con with writer‑director Rian Johnson and his cousin, composer Nathan Johnson. The film’s blend of noir, futurism, and moral complexity makes it a standout in modern sci‑fi, and this discussion explores how its world was built—musically, narratively, and philosophically.
Looper follows Joe, a contract killer (“looper”) who executes targets sent back from the future. When his future self is sent back to be killed, the loop collapses, forcing both versions of Joe into a collision of motives, ethics, and timelines. The film is known for its grounded approach to time travel, its emotional stakes, and its refusal to offer easy answers.
Star Trek often treats time as something that must be preserved—history is a fragile timeline, and altering it is dangerous or unethical. Looper takes a very different stance.
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