13th Floor, directed by Joseph Rusnak. Starring Craig Bierko, Gretchen Mol, Vincent D'Onofrio, Dennis Haysbert, Steve Schub, Amin Mullar, Stahl. Release 1. Germany, United States. Read comments. Skip spoilers.
When I’m not there, I’m free, but when I play the game, time—hours, days, weeks—gets disconnected from memory, and things happen that they do not know about.
So I wrote a letter before finishing the game.
Then I ran, and I realized that it wasn’t my own mind, and that I was not alone.
I like this kind of film with fresh imagination.
If I can’t imagine it as a turning point, besides ideas like this, I often think of films like The Matrix as connections. The flow of thought I experienced is similar to The Matrix; there are overlapping parts in the setup. The end of the century seems like an era when imagination explodes and many entertaining films are born, but that is not easy. Still, it’s insanely fun; he also seems to know it’s a system, and you can see the ending, but it’s still entertaining. You never know what will happen.
If I die, connect— even if you guess — until after Whitney dies and Ashton and Whitney switch. As far as I know, oh, then could I do something like this.
That thought came to me.
I became insanely fun. I didn’t kill you. In fact, you are system by system by system 3243. Now beep, beep, beep, beep, hyung. I thought I would die like this, but I didn’t know the aftermath of death would still be so great. I don’t know how long it took.
Second, it’s still pretty good. Anyway, the setup is basically this fun, and the director is good too.

I really recommend it to everyone.
You won’t regret it.