00:00And Chowatel, why do you think Clark likes the back rooms?
00:03Why do you think he kind of likes being there?
00:07Yeah, I think that his journey is a strange one, you know, with the back rooms.
00:11And it really does trace his own psychological, unsettled nature.
00:18And just where he is in his life, you know.
00:20And how there's a kind of element of the back rooms which makes me feel that it needs him and
00:25he needs it.
00:26And it's sort of mysterious.
00:28But in that cinematic way, it's something that I understand as I watch it.
00:35It's hard to articulate.
00:36But I can see how they sort of settle and understand each other in a way.
00:41Which I think is one of the great and interesting and sort of deep mysteries about the back rooms.
00:46And how it is related to psychology and the psychologies of the characters.
00:51Do you relate to him at all?
00:52Like, do you like the liminal spaces?
00:54I mean, personally, I do not like them.
00:58Like, you know, if it was me, no.
01:02But I can see how somebody in that state of mind, in the state of mind that he has got
01:09himself into, which I do empathize with.
01:10You know, I don't necessarily relate exactly, but I empathize with where he is.
01:15And I can see, I can sort of join those dots as to how in his kind of chaos, and
01:23the chaos of his mind at that sort of point, and the disorder of his mind, really.
01:27You know, the sort of disorder and chaos hidden as something else, you know, that is the back rooms, is
01:36sort of, you know, pretending to be ordered in a way.
01:39And I can see.
01:42You're right.
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