Dual Movie Plot, Dual Movie Ending Explained, Does Sara get along with her clone?

Dual Plot Synopsis


  Sarah (Karen Gillan) decides to pay off a clone of herself so she won't be alone after her mother and boyfriend leave after being told she has an incurable disease. Because this movie is set in the future, the cloning process doesn't take long at all, because after spitting in a cup, the clone is alive an hour later, ready to learn more about Sarah and the life she's about to take over. .


  Fortunately, Sarah was later told that she had gone into remission. So he doesn't die after all! This is good news for Sara, but the situation is not so simple. When her clone pleads for survival, Sarah learns that she must now compete in a court-ordered duel to the death with her doppelganger. Does he win? Or double kills him and takes his own life?




  Does Sara get along with her clone?

  Sarah doesn't befriend her clone, but she quickly comes to terms with his duplicity. She teaches him more about his likes and dislikes and helps him adjust to his lifestyle.


  So far so good, but when Sara's boyfriend and mother start liking the double more than Sara herself, she starts to feel neglected and angry. The fact that her double has a perfect body and (due to a mistake in the cloning process) blue eyes doesn't help Sarah's feelings either.

  Thankfully, Sarah learns that she has overcome her illness. Under normal circumstances, he would have been allowed to decommission and destroy his clone. After that, he would be able to rebuild his life and family relationships.

  But the clone lived on Earth long enough for them to have a chance to survive if they wanted to, until Sarah found out she had gone into remission. Sarah's double expresses this desire, and it means one thing: by law, the two must duel to determine who lives and who dies.




  How does Sara take this news?

  As you would expect! After being told that he won't die from any disease affecting his body, the last thing he wants is to die at the hands of his clone. So he decides to prepare himself for battle with the help of Trent, a professional fighting coach. She teaches him how to use his body as a weapon and gives him advice on when and how to use various different weapons.


  Sarah also attends a gym class to get herself in shape for the fight ahead.




Is Sarah turning into a death machine?

  As Sara discovers, killing someone and actually killing them are two different things. Trent brings his dog and asks Sarah to kill him with a bow and arrow. Sarah can't do it—the dog is too cute—and that makes her question her ability to kill her double.


  But Sara later sees his double through the window. Although he fails to kill the dog, he suddenly prompts the clone to kill him and shoots an arrow through the window. He misses and kills another dog instead!

  Despite missing the intended target, it looks like Sarah may have all it takes to kill her double. After a chase, he finds his clone hiding among the playground equipment at the playground. But instead of trying to kill each other, the two women have a heart-to-heart and share their feelings with each other.

  Sarah tells the duo that she's unhappy with the way she's taking over her life. And the double expresses Sarah's unhappiness with living her life, as she struggles with Peter, Sarah's boyfriend, and her mother.




  Do Sarah and her pair become friends?

  Not really, but they start to understand each other better. After joining a support group for duel survivors, the two decide to defy society's expectations and leave the country together.


  After preparing to run in the desert, Sarah takes his double and takes him into the forest. During the car trip, the clone tries to learn the ins and outs of driving from Sarah.

  When they reach a wooded area, they check each other's backpacks to make sure no one is carrying a weapon. They drink water from bottles prepared by the stunt double. 



 Do the two run together?

  No, it turns out that the double water Sarah made was poisoned.


  After leaving for a short time, Sarah starts to develop blood in her mouth, and she realizes that she's been tricked.

  The film then moves to a duel where one of the women comes alone. He's limping and when asked why he's late for the duel, he replies with the old answer...car trouble! Later, when asked about her identity, she tells the duel host that she is the original Sara. It is possible because she is wearing Sarah's clothes.

  The duel does not continue because the other person does not come. It's safe to assume they're dead, which begs the question: Was it Sarah who actually came to the duel, or did she?  




 Did Sarah survive?

  Most probably not. He probably died after being poisoned. Later, the stunt double entered his clothes and entered the duel alone.


  The mother and her boyfriend testify in court that the person is Sarah, but both lie to support the clone because they prefer the couple.

    Since the stunt double can't drive and Sara was actively advised to drive before, it can be assumed that the condition of the car was due to her lack of skills behind the wheel.

  He then receives a phone call from Sarah's mother to inform her that she has changed her contact lenses. This is further evidence that the mother knew the woman was a double and had previously purchased clone contact lenses to hide her blue eyes.

  At the end of the film, two people are sitting in a car and crying. She's probably crying because she's now stuck in Sarah's life, her mother she doesn't love, and her boyfriend. So even though she wins, in the end she discovers that double Sarah's life isn't really worth living.

Post a Comment

0 Comments