00:00I get asked this a lot, and for me, it's like asking me to choose my favorite child, right?
00:06And also, as a writer, we wrote these endings in tandem.
00:11They are meant to be understood together, right?
00:15And that's why we actually made it the way it was.
00:20So the two actually need to be understood and experienced in tandem with each other.
00:25They are a contrast. They are a pair, and they are the two sides of the same coin, the recto
00:32verso, if you will.
00:34And so I know it's not quite as satisfying for people, but genuinely, from my personal perspective,
00:41I do not have a favorite because each one represents something different for each of the characters.
00:46It represents something different for the outcome of the world,
00:49and there is a moral, there is a philosophical aspect to it and an emotional aspect to it.
00:55And the question we want to ask is, in the end, whose happiness do we prioritize?
01:02And when we pursue happiness for somebody, what is the cost?
01:08And do we fully consider the cost to the other folks, the other characters?
01:13What does that mean?
01:14And so we really have to understand all of that together as a package.
Comments