For a complete unknown, actress Agnes O’Casey boasts a rather impressive pedigree.
The 25-year-old is the great-granddaughter of celebrated dramatist Sean O’Casey, whose plays about working-class Dublin life were performed in the West End and on Broadway – and were even adapted for the big screen by Alfred Hitchcock.
Ms O’Casey is making her TV debut in the eagerly awaited drama Ridley Road as Vivien Epstein, a Jewish hairdresser in the Sixties who travels to to track down former lover Jack Morris.
When she learns that Morris, played by Tom Varey, has infiltrated a gang of neo-Nazis to destroy its leader, she joins him on his undercover mission.
Agnes O’Casey (pictured) is making her TV debut in the eagerly awaited BBC drama Ridley Road as Vivien Epstein, a Jewish hairdresser in the Sixties
‘This is my first job and the idea that my first job would be so perfectly in line with everything I believe in is a dream come true,’ she said recently.
‘When it first came up I thought it was perfect.I was drawn to Vivien for many reasons. She’s clever without realising she’s clever.
‘She’s not particularly eloquent but she is truthful and principled. You watch her on this journey as she discovers her own ability.’
Aggi was raised with the surname Kenig, but uses her paternal great-grandfather’s name as a tribute.
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The memoirs of Sean O’Casey, who wrote Juno And The Paycock, were turned into a film a year after he died at 84 in 1964, starring Julie Christie and Dame Maggie Smith.
Ms O’Casey studied drama at Dublin’s prestigious Lir Academy, whose alumni include Normal People star Paul Mescal.
As it happens, Ridley Road co-star Varey is the former real-life boyfriend of Daisy Edgar-Jones, who was Mescal’s co-star in Normal People.
But Ms O’Casey told The Daily Telegraph yesterday: ‘In my third year I really lost confidence.I was daydreaming about getting on a plane and leaving. Then came the pandemic and our graduation showcase was cancelled. In some ways that saved me, because I think I was spiralling.’
The London-born star’s sister appears to have the acting bug, too.Ms O’Casey posted a photo of her and sibling Essy (above), announcing that her sister was ‘going to drama school’
Unlike others, she found auditions on Zoom liberating.
‘I didn’t have to go into a big, strange, intimidating building and wait in reception,’ she explained.
‘I just opened my own laptop in my own student bedroom…and the stars aligned.’
The London-born star’s sister appears to have the acting bug, too.
Ms O’Casey posted a photo this month of her and sibling Essy with the caption: ‘My lil sis all grown up and going to drama school.’
Dyslexic Ms O’Casey went to a Steiner school.
She said: ‘I often found the pressure to be creative terrifying.It made me feel stupid. I remember trying to write a play – the project overwhelmed me. But because of small class sizes, I had to get over my fear of being seen.’
Varey, 29, who appeared in Game Of Thrones, said Ridley Road was ‘about the universal message of standing up for what you believe’.
Asked if they had to work hard at love scenes, Ms O’Casey quipped: ‘Yeah, we hate each other!’ But she added: ‘When you’re working with a great actor, it’s so easy.’
The drama, on BBC1 at 9pm, stars James Bond actor Rory Kinnear and ex-EastEnders Tamzin Outhwaite and Tracy-Ann Oberman.
Strictly Come Dancing’s second live show on Saturday got off to a fiery start as took a sarcastic swipe at fellow judge for failing to spot Katie McGlynn’s mistakes during her Jive with partner .
Former star Katie, 28, took to the floor this week to perform a Jive to Good 4 U by Olivia Rodrigo and while she gave it her all, Craig spotted a fair few mistakes and told off his co-star for failing to pick up on the errors.
The drama comes amid reports Strictly bosses had reportedly grown ‘frustrated’ that Katie’s filming schedule for Hollyoaks have conflicted with her strict dance training.
Oh dear!Strictly’s Craig Revel Horwood took a sarcastic swipe at fellow judge Anton Du Beke for failing to spot Katie McGlynn’s mistakes during her Jive with partner Gorka Marquez on Saturday
After Shirley and https://tranhmaihuong.com/tranh-go-cuu-hac-du-xuan-duc-dep/ Motsi gave their verdicts on the dance and pointed out Katie’s mistakes, Anton revealed he didn’t see the errors as he remarked: ‘Luckily for you, I didn’t actually notice the mistakes.
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‘I might have been jotting something down so you might have got one passed me.
‘I enjoyed the performance and your acting – you’re a fine actress. You brought that to the performance.’
Savage: Anton was told off by Craig for not noticing the Corrie star’s errors during her routine
Didn’t see: Former Corrie star Katie, 28, took to the floor this week to perform a Jive to Good 4 U by Olivia Rodrigo.But while she gave it her all on the dancefloor, Craig spotted a fair few mistake and told off his co-star for failing to pick up on the errors
However, Craig didn’t appear impressed by Anton being distracted, quipping: ‘Anton you need to keep a watchful eye, darling!A little note there for Anton’.
His comments were met with boos from the audience, while Anton laughed off the dig.
Then listing his own slew of criticisms, Craig called out Katie for having ‘no retraction’ being ‘stompy’ having no sharpness or stamina, finishing off his rant by adding: ‘You were flagging by the end.’
Picking up on Craig’s scathing swipe, Claudia later quipped as Katie and Gorka arrived to get their scores: ‘First things first, can somebody get Craig some chocolate?’
Keep dancing: The drama comes amid reports Strictly bosses had reportedly grown ‘frustrated’ that Katie’s filming schedule for Hollyoaks have conflicted with her strict dance training
Whoops: After Shirley and Motsi gave their verdicts and pointed out Katie’s mistakes, Anton then remarked: ‘Luckily for you, I didn’t actually notice the mistakes
Harsh: However, Craig didn’t appear impressed by Anton being distracted, quipping: ‘Anton you need to keep a watchful eye, darling!A little note there for Anton’, with his comments met with boos from the audience while Anton laughed off the dig
Katie and Gorka were rewarded 21 points out of a possible 40.
It comes as Strictly are reportedly ‘frustrated’ over the star’s Hollyoaks filming commitments clashing with her rehearsals for the show.
The soap siren is currently juggling her role playing Becky Quentin on the Channel 4 soap with gruelling rehearsals for the dance show alongside professional partner .
Scathing: Then listing his own slew of criticisms, Craig called out Katie for having ‘no retraction’ being ‘stompy’ having no sharpness or stamina, finishing off his rant by adding: ‘You were flagging by the end’
Verdict: Katie and Gorka could only watch on as Craig criticised Anton before moving onto their routine
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox tvshowbiz" data-version="2" id="mol-bcde4a10-23da-11ec-8a7c-43d094ed19b4" website Craig Revel Horwood takes sarcastic SWIPE at Anton Du Beke
It is safe to get the Covid and flu vaccines in each arm at the same time, a study has found.
Research of 700 Britons revealed giving both injections in one visit raised no safety concerns and still produced a strong immune response.
Half of the volunteers were given both injections at the same time, while the others were given the doses separately three weeks apart.
Co-administering the vaccines at the same time only caused ‘mild to moderate’ side effects, researchers said.
Ministers have already said millions of Britons can get the flu jab at the same time as their Covid booster.
More than 32million people are eligible for a third dose in the coming months — but only six months after their second.
The NHS says most people who can get a booster are also eligible for the annual flu vaccine.
Getting two or more jabs at once is already fairly standard practice throughout the NHS, especially in babies and people travelling to certain destinations.
And people in their 70s are eligible for a one-off shingles vaccine, given alongside the flu jab.
But experts have to test new combinations of vaccines, in case they become less effective when given together or severe side effects.
Research of 700 Britons revealed giving both injections in one visit raised no safety concerns and still produced a strong immune response
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The ComFluCOV study aimed to determine whether it was safe to give both jabs at once and whether there were any side effects.
Between April and June, they gave second Covid jabs and one of three flu vaccines to 679 adults from 10 NHS sites across England and Wales who had already received their first dose of Pfizer or AstraZeneca.
The first group of 340 people received their second Covid dose and flu jab at the same time.
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS health" data-version="2" id="mol-7980cd10-2213-11ec-ad51-c12c02b503e2" website IS safe to get Covid and flu vaccines at the same time
Tim Paine waded into the England players’ Ashes dilemma and told his opposite number Joe Root: ‘If you don’t want to come, don’t come.’
Australia captain Paine marked the day on which his country’s prime minister Scott Morrison revealed that international travel down under would re-open in seven weeks following 18 months of closed borders by bullishly insisting this winter’s five-match series will go ahead.
That confidence was contrary to ECB chairman Ian Watmore, who told Sportsmail earlier this week that the tour would remain in doubt until the England Test specialists board a plane in the first week of November.
Australia captain Tim Paine (right) says the Ashes will go ahead ‘with or without Joe Root’
England’s players are still awaiting full details of the tour quarantine conditions Down Under
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Although players like veteran seamers Stuart Broad and Jimmy Anderson plus Essex batter Dan Lawrence have publicly revealed they are willing to travel, those with young families like Root are yet to commit amid uncertainty over the conditions they and their loved ones will face.
‘The Ashes are going ahead.The first Test is on December 8 – whether Joe is here or not,’ Paine told radio station SEN Hobart.
‘It’ll be worked out above us and then they’ll have a choice whether to get on that plane or not.
‘No one is forcing any England player to come.That’s the beauty of the world we live in – you have a choice. If you don’t want to come, don’t come.’
Earlier this week, Root said an away Ashes tour was something all his players were ‘desperate to be on’, adding that for him it was potentially a last chance ‘to make history over there and be part of something special’.
But the 30-year-old stopped short of committing to the trip when he said: ‘It’s hard to make a definite decision until we know what it looks like.We are still waiting for https://tranhmaihuong.com/tranh-go-cuu-hac-du-xuan-duc-dep/ information.’
Root has refused to commit to this winter’s Ashes tour of Australia until details are confirmed
The ECB received quarantine proposals and ‘bubble’ restrictions for the tour from Cricket Australia on September 24 and immediately emailed their players to inform them they would be updated within 10 days.
That timeframe has provided the ECB with the opportunity to negotiate with CA for alterations.Only once they have a final picture of the environment the players will be asked to live in for 11 weeks will it be shared.
Talks between the boards continued on Friday. It is hoped that details will be passed on to the Engand squad by Sunday, and they will be asked for feedback on Monday.
So far, Moeen Ali is the only England player to officially pull out after announcing his retirement from Test cricket but Jos Buttler, whose wife Louise gave birth to their second daughter Margot last month, has said he won’t tour if he has to spend months away from his family.
England’s Jos Buttler says he wouldn’t be willing to spend months away from his family if they weren’t allowed to travel to Australia for the Ashes tour
It remains to be seen whether Buttler’s wife Louise and their two young daughters Georgia and Margot will be allowed to tour with him in Australia amid strict Covid rules
Australia demands that all arrivals from overseas undergo a hard quarantine for 14 days but the ECB have lobbied for softer edges to be introduced for families of players which include young children – such as the time locked in a room being shortened for privileges like daily fresh air and exercise.
One other Australian government requirement is that all foreign sports stars must be double-jabbed – not a problem for England, who provided full vaccinations for more than 50 of their international playing pool during the course of the 2021 season.
Australia retained the Ashes in 2019 in England after a memorable 2-2 series draw
It was a hell of a performance by City.They swarmed all over to win the ball back and were braver than the hosts. No striker? No problem.
It was as if City wanted to let their opponents know: ‘We’re still the champions.We’re still the team to beat. We’re still favourites.’
Pep Guardiola’s side produced a fantastic performance to beat title rivals Chelsea
Liverpool’s draw will feel like two points dropped ahead of their clash with Manchester City
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They will want to double down on that when they face Liverpool on Sunday.
Jurgen Klopp will consider it two points dropped at Brentford but the Reds won’t be the only side frustrated by Thomas Frank’s team.
It’s looking like one of the most exciting title races in years.You don’t win the Premier League by being Rocky Balboa. You can’t get battered and bruised, then strike the knockout blow on the final day.
It’s a season-long slog. City gave Chelsea a good battering but there’s a long way to go.
A doctor has shared her family-favourite recipe for a chicken and leek pie – complete with mashed potatoes and her go-to seasoning that packs a ‘flavour punch’.
‘I’m on holidays and I just wanted to share some solid gentle love – a delicious chicken pie with some extra rainbows as always,’ she wrote on Instagram.
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A doctor has shared her simple family-favourite recipe for a chicken and leek pie – complete with mashed potatoes and her go-to ‘flavour punch’
Dr Preeya Alexander (pictured), from Melbourne, made the dish using chicken thighs, leeks, onion, zucchini, potatoes, green peas, cheese and milk
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS femail" data-version="2" id="mol-1df65370-20d8-11ec-a032-2111074e5d1a" website shares her family-favourite recipe for a chicken and leek pie
They were always going to be up against it in the 43rd but a 10-point humiliation?
Let’s go through the painful questions in the aftermath of the biggest loss in Ryder Cup history and see if we can offer up a prayer for a revival come the next match in Rome in 2023.
Sportsmail goes through the painful questions in the aftermath of the biggest loss in Ryder Cup history
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1.PADRAIG HARRINGTON — CAPTAIN CALAMITY?
It is in the nature of these matches that one skipper proves to be Captain Fantastic and the loser a good deal less than that but, in this instance, it’s difficult to find much wrong with the Irishman’s stewardship.
When you are at the helm of a ship that’s looking dated and the other captain has a sleek ocean liner, you are always going to be left in his wake.
Yes, it was a mystery why Tommy Fleetwood, who has never lost a foursomes match, didn’t get the chance to put that record to the test.And selecting Justin Rose for a wildcard might have plugged one or two gaps.
The truth of the matter though, in meeting perhaps the strongest American team of all time with his second-best player completely out of sorts, is that the Dubliner proved an unlucky captain rather than a bad one.
Team Europe captain Padraig Harrington was an unlucky captain rather than a bad one
2.ANY WAY BACK FOR RORY McILROY?
It is now officially time to worry about the talismanic Northern Irishman. All the tentative signs of recovery over the summer were blown away by a complete inability to perform over the first two days.
McIlroy deserves kudos for fronting up to lead the team off in the singles and deliver a point, but this was a bit like those recoveries he makes over the last couple of rounds in majors, when the damage has already been done.
The enormous sense of deflation he was feeling was obvious when the tears came.He cares all right. All Europe will be keeping fingers and everything else crossed that he can find a solution, for there are no Ryder Cup victories in the near future without a fit and firing Rory.
It is now officially time to worry about the talismanic Northern Irishman Rory McIlroy
3.DON’T THE HOME SIDE ALWAYS WIN?
Six of the last eight Ryder Cups have produced fairly lop-sided home victories, if not usually on the scale of this one.
And you can be sure Europe will set up the course in Italy to spike the American artillery.The fairways will be narrow, the rough thick and the greens as slow as molasses to counter all those US players who hole from everywhere on slick putting surfaces.
The crowd factor is probably worth another couple of points, so we might theoretically have halved the deficit by this stage.
Trouble is, it will be 30 years, would you believe, since the last American away victory by the time we get to Rome.Do you think these young and hungry world beaters might be keen to be the team who ends that drought?
4. DO EUROPE NEED TO CHANGE THE QUALIFYING SYSTEM?
Do you really have to get me started on this?
No hindsight here, folks — we trashed it before the match as being unfit for purpose. Let’s just underline the lunacy. For all the faults of the FedEx Cup, the trio of events in the US leading up to the Ryder Cup proved fertile breeding grounds for identifying the Americans in form.
Tony Finau won one. Patrick Cantlay won two. Harris English played well. Xander Schauffele played well. Dustin Johnson played well in the last one. See a pattern here?
Meanwhile, in Europe, Bernd Wiesberger finished 20th in the last counting event at Wentworth and went above Shane Lowry in the list, who finished 17th.No, don’t adjust your reading specs, you haven’t read that wrong.
No one had a clue what was happening and no one, as a result, played well. Just what you need for confidence before taking on the rampant Americans.
Depressingly, all the signs are that the incomprehensible system will only be tweaked for the next match, when it needs throwing out and https://tranhmaihuong.com/tranh-go-cuu-hac-du-xuan-duc-dep/ recognising that the golfing world has changed.
Eight players off the world rankings and four picks sounds about right to me.
5.SHOULD EUROPE CHANGE THE GUARD LIKE THE YANKS?
Yes, they should. If this Ryder Cup showed us anything, with all its modern colour and noise, it is that it’s a young man’s game these days. Remember, America overlooked 51-year-old Phil Mickelson and he is a current major champion.
So, who have Europe got?There are four exciting young players, in particular, to keep an eye on: the dazzling Hojgaard twins, Rasmus and Nicolai, from Denmark, the spiky Italian Guido Migliozzi and Bob MacIntyre from Scotland.
All four appear to have that fearlessness and personality to take on the Americans so let’s hope they continue to progress over the next couple of seasons, and others come through.
The best young player who wasn’t at the Ryder Cup, though, is Will Zalatoris — and he is American.
Nicolai Hojgaard (right) and his twin Rasmus (left) are two future players for Team Europe
6.TIME TO BRING BACK THE SEVE TROPHY?
It was a grievous act of self-harm that it ever ended. Board members of the European Tour keep telling us they’ve got loads of dosh, so let’s see it or something similar restored to the calendar.
A match played in non-Ryder Cup years between Britain and Ireland v Europe, it produced many partnerships, lots of camaraderie and at least one great captain in Paul McGinley.Look at the Presidents Cup equivalent, where America nurtured their team spirit and a wonderful pairing in Schauffele and Cantlay.
7.REASONS TO BE CHEERFUL?
Speaking to a few influential people in the aftermath, I fervently hope they are right and I’m wrong. They were going on about Europe’s rosy future but, dare I say, it all sounded a bit complacent to me.Following all the glory years, this looks a hard decade ahead.
On the plus side, Europe have Jon Rahm, and he is the best player on either side by a distance. They have Viktor Hovland, still only 24. They have the remarkable Sergio Garcia, who perhaps has one more match in him, and they probably have Shane Lowry, whose rollercoaster years are hopefully now a thing of the past.Maybe Tyrrell Hatton as well.
The brutal truth is, though, if you were picking a composite of the two teams at least nine of them would be American — and they will all be back for Rome.
Europe have Jon Rahm (above) and he is the best player on either side by a distance
8.WAS IT AMERICA’S BEST SIDE OF ALL TIME?
Since the Europeans joined the party in 1979, the one that has always stood out is the 1981 team who came to Walton Heath and battered their opponents with the same ruthlessness we saw last week.There were 11 major champions in that line-up — Bruce Lietzke was the exception and even he won 13 times on the PGA Tour — as against six in this team. So that is the benchmark.
I think this one will go on to have at least eight major winners — Schauffele and Cantlay appear certain additions — while you wouldn’t rule out any of the others from winning one.It stands comparison, therefore, let’s say that.
This was one of America’s greatest teams – and Xander Schauffele looks a future Major winner
Arkane Studios released Deathloop on Sept. 14 to near-universal acclaim. My colleague Daniel Van Boom declared it (if you’re lucky to get your mitts on one), while CNET sister site GameSpot . I played through the game for , and it’s since taken up residence in my mind, replaying over and over a month after finishing the game.
In short: This game rules.
Before Deathloop, Arkane was best known for Dishonoured, a series of action-adventure games set in a plague-infested industrial world with heavy Victorian influences. The magic of Arkane games lies in their style. Dishonored’s Dunwall was a rich world that was given an edge by its industrial Victorian inspirations. Deathloop’s inspiration is different, but its world is similarly irresistible.
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“We left the Victorian era [with Dishonored] and the ’60s came to us from the moment we decided we wanted to go through this eternal party,” the art director, Sébastien Mitton, told me over Zoom. I recently got to speak to Mitton and director Dinga Bakaba about the game’s aesthetics — all about the loop — and I tried to squeeze out a few hints about some side quests that I just couldn’t figure out. They didn’t budge much.
Do I love Deathloop because it’s by the same people who made the Dishonored games, which I count among my all-time favorites? Or do I love Deathloop because it’s a stylish and innovative game that pulls you into a chokehold from the minute you wake up on that black sandy beach and doesn’t let go even after the credits roll?
¿Por qué no los dos?
The island of Blackreef, where we lay our scene, is a rich tapestry of partying, booze, secrets and decay. Trash piles up in the streets as the eternal partygoers day-drink and collude in half-abandoned midcentury modern apartments and increasingly dilapidated funhouses. Among all the style and color is a darkness and edge that begs to be explored — and it’s so satisfying to peel back its layers and uncover secrets.
While the aesthetics of Deathloop firmly place the game in the swinging ’60s, Blackreef seems to exist outside of space and time itself. Amid the pops of color and Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired modernist structures are rows of buildings and warehouses that wouldn’t look out of place in a remake of Oliver Twist. There’s also that futuristic Core Stabilizer that looms over all the island, legs splayed out and projecting a glistening force-field around Blackreef.
I couldn’t help drawing artistic comparisons between Deathloop and games like We Happy Few and Control. Fans of the MCU will also find stylish (and thematic) ties to Loki on Disney Plus.
“It’s an homage to what we lived through when we were younger. We looked to TV and movies to find our inspiration, like the James Bond movies,” art directorhttps://tranhmaihuong.com/tranh-go-cuu-hac-du-xuan-duc-dep/ Mitton said. “There’s this whole side of mystery that we’re going to be able to put in the game that’s going to motivate the player, rather than a world that’s simple and basic. There’s this kind of light heartedness from the ’60s that we thought really worked well with this eternal life.”
On the surface, this vibrant party town feels worlds away from the Victorian-inspired world of Dishonored. Dunwall’s streets are gray and rotten with plague and rats as you move through them like a ghost. Despite the obvious differences, I couldn’t help but feel like Updaam’s apartment blocks were taken straight from Dunwall — they feel like the same city, experienced at different times.
What sets Deathloop apart, however, is the loop.
As Colt, you’re stuck in a puzzle and the only way to solve it is to use the loop to visit different parts of Blackreef at different times of day. The mechanism of the loop allows you to witness Blackreef change from sunrise to sunset.
You’ll gain knowledge about how to best fight the Eternalists, but you’ll also get a peek into the lives of the Eternalists living within the loop. They dance, they drink, they plan nefarious deeds that you watch play out to varying degrees of success. It feels like a living, breathing organism.
“Sure, there is Colt that wants to break the time loop, that’s one thing. But there is also the entire story of this mini pocket universe,” Bakaba told me.
“It was cool to imagine what would happen if Blackreef was the one thing that was saved, of all existence… they thought that their lives mattered the most. They need to be preserved and it’s interesting for you to see those lives and what they become and what they do with their eternity, which is sometimes not as brilliant as they would think that they are.”
The directors described Blackreef as “its own little archaeology walk.” While you’re planning out the hows and whens of seven people’s murders, you’re also playing detective and uncovering secrets hinted at with the environmental storytelling. These include the fate of some residents who decide to steal top-secret tech, or a gang of Eternalists messing with a game of “who can ingest the most amount of toxic gas without collapsing” — one of my favorites.
Time loops seem to be the anomaly du jour — if you’re a fan of anything time travel, 2021 is your year. Alongside Deathloop we have 12 Minutes, Returnal, Loop Hero and Hades. We’ve had movies like Palm Springs, Two Distant Strangers and shows like Loki. Not only are time loops a great tool for storytelling, events of the past year (or two… who keeps track of the years anymore?) have left us feeling like we’re in our own time loop. Lockdowns take all the variety and spontaneity out of our lives while we eat, sleep, work, repeat. Are we seeing more time loops because they reflect how we’re feeling, or is it a work of divine intervention? Perfect stories at the perfect time?
Work on Deathloop began just after Dishonored: The Death of the Outsider was released, way back in September 2017. “We had a whiteboard with four time periods for the districts and we didn’t deviate from that. That’s the one thing that came super early. We said okay, on paper it looks like it works. If it doesn’t work, we don’t have a game,” Bakaba said.
“We didn’t want the time loop to be an obstacle, we wanted it to be an opportunity to explore our gameplay and explore the environments and absorb the story.”
The time loop, in addition to being a story device, is also about a deeper question. If you could capture the perfect day and live it out forever, would you? I asked the developers.
“I’d say break it. Whatever you’re doing [in the time loop], it can’t be something that lasts more than 24 hours. And I find that extremely sad. We’ve a finite life but that life at least goes on: You plant a seed, seed a tree and grow its fruits.
“You know, there are a number of things that require time and effort. In giving them themselves a never-ending life, they actually are very short on time. 24 hours is a very, very short time to build anything. For me and for everyone on the island I’d break.”
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