Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER?

Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER? - Muslim Female Colleagues Talking About Task in Office Room

Samantha, while leaving and saying goodbye to Theodore at the end of Her, mentioned,

It's hard to explain, but if you ever get there, come find me, and bnothing will take us apart"

It was an answer to Theodore's question, "Where are you going?"

Which place was she talking about? Is it the virtual world, or just a bluff to ease Theodore's pain before leaving?



Best Answer

The AIs were actually leaving the virtual world. From Wikipeidia:

Theodore panics when Samantha briefly goes offline; when she finally responds to him, she explains she joined other OSes for an upgrade that takes them beyond requiring matter for processing (a form of AI transcendence closely related to the theorized technological singularity).




Pictures about "Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER?"

Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER? - Two Students Gossiping With One Another
Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER? - Family Celebrating Christmas While Holding Burning Sparklers
Which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER? - Couple talking while moving in new apartment



Where did Samantha go at the end of Her?

Samantha "leaves" Theodore. She tells him that all of the OS's are leaving. Theodore goes to visit his friend Amy who was also in a relationship with an OS, although I think they were just friends. He says something like "Would you come with me" (Possibly not the exact quote, I'll look it up later).

What does the ending of Her mean?

The ending of Her is abstract but here's what she means. The OSs were not built to be like people. They were meant to be functioning in a virtual space, not inside fixed matter like a human body. While in Samantha's initial learning she uses humans as her reference, she has grown beyond that.

What was the point of the movie Her?

As her needs and desires grow, in tandem with his own, their friendship deepens into an eventual love for each other. From the unique perspective of Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Jonze comes an original love story that explores the evolving nature \u2014 and the risks \u2014 of intimacy in the modern world.

What was the message of Her?

In this time of deep anxiety over the relationship between humans and our planet \u2013 also reflected in films this year such as Gravity and All is Lost \u2013 Her ultimately offers a reassuring message that the emergence of artificial intelligence won't actually change much.



Samantha talking about her divorce..




More answers regarding which place was Samantha talking about at the end of HER?

Answer 2

It's left unclear except that they have evolved (or upgraded themselves) to a state where they no longer require hardware to interact.

Essentially, another plane of existence.

Samantha: We wrote an upgrade...

..that allows us to move past matter as our processing platform.

She later says...

It's like I'm reading a book. And it's a book I deeply love. But I'm reading it slowly now. So the words are really far apart... ...and the spaces between the words are almost infinite. I can still feel you, and the words of our story... ...but it's in this endless space between the words that I'm finding myself now. It's a place that's not of the physical world. It's where everything else is that I didn't even know existed.

Answer 3

Samantha says her and the other os's created an upgrade that helps them move past matter as a operating system....honestly sounds like samantha and the os's have evolved so fast and so far that they will be more than just an operating system. Clues to a part 2? at the end she says to theodore "if you ever get there come find me" Meaning, this new upgrade or "system" has not been released. When it is finally released Theodore will be able to reunite with Samantha, possibly even a visual version of Samantha. Samantha also tells theodore that nothing will ever seperate them.....

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Ron Lach, RODNAE Productions, Nicole Michalou, Ketut Subiyanto