Furthermore, there is a stance of a psychological impact that it would have on humanity, considering that robots are unable to respond in the more friendly and positive manner that humanity can bring. The film “Never Let Me Go” pertains to the theme of an uncertain future in a unique manner in which, while the main characters hesitate to stand up to the considerable “injustice” that society enforces upon them, they nonetheless attempt to harness their “dreams” and obtain insight about how it is to experience the world on their own. In the film “Never Let Me Go,” the setting is portrayed in an alternate timeline somewhere in the 19’s where mankind has finally found the ability to successfully clone themselves, therefore, society has resolved to use these clones as organ donors to their original counterparts. The protagonist Kathy is presented in an interesting tense that, being a carrier, she does not look forward for humanity nor has any interest in technological advancement but rather she tends to look backward to her past time events. The audience is then given insight in her life as a young girl somewhere in her elementary school with her childhood friends Ruth and Tommy. During then, it is still present that Kathy herself does not have any
Furthermore, there is a stance of a psychological impact that it would have on humanity, considering that robots are unable to respond in the more friendly and positive manner that humanity can bring. The film “Never Let Me Go” pertains to the theme of an uncertain future in a unique manner in which, while the main characters hesitate to stand up to the considerable “injustice” that society enforces upon them, they nonetheless attempt to harness their “dreams” and obtain insight about how it is to experience the world on their own. In the film “Never Let Me Go,” the setting is portrayed in an alternate timeline somewhere in the 19’s where mankind has finally found the ability to successfully clone themselves, therefore, society has resolved to use these clones as organ donors to their original counterparts. The protagonist Kathy is presented in an interesting tense that, being a carrier, she does not look forward for humanity nor has any interest in technological advancement but rather she tends to look backward to her past time events. The audience is then given insight in her life as a young girl somewhere in her elementary school with her childhood friends Ruth and Tommy. During then, it is still present that Kathy herself does not have any