Transcript for:
The Map of Tiny Perfect Things - 2021 Film Recap

Welcome back to Movie Recaps. Today I will  show you a romance, fantasy film from 2021,   titled The Map of Tiny Perfect Things.  Spoilers ahead! Watch out and take care.  It's a normal morning for everyone in town, but  not for high school student and artist Mark, who   is stuck in a time loop. He's been through this  same day so many times that he has every detail   memorized: every morning, he watches his mom go  to work, then he has breakfast with his father   Daniel and his sister Emma, guessing every little  thing they're going to say, like an invitation to   Emma's soccer match that he turns down and knowing  all the answers to the crossword Daniel is doing.   That's how the rest of his day goes as well: he  takes the streets on his bicycle and navigates   the town knowing exactly what each person will do 

  • sometimes he even interferes, like taking away a   phone from a driver's hand to avoid an accident.  But mostly he has fun with it, doing things like   buying the lottery ticket with the winning  numbers or driving an excavator around town.   Mark doesn't go to class anymore, but every day he  makes sure to stop by a particular corner to give   directions to a girl called Phoebe, who he has  a crush on yet he still hasn't managed to find   a way to keep a proper conversation going with  her. In the afternoon, he goes to the local pool   to prevent a ball from hitting Phoebe on the head  or rescuing her before she falls, and sometimes   he manages to walk her home after that, but she  never accepts his invitation to hang out later.   When he's feeling frustrated with this situation,  Mark visits his friend Henry, who is having   difficulties finishing a videogame level. By  pretending to talk about a hypothetical situation,   Mark asks him what he would do if he got in a time  loop, and Henry says he'd get the girl because   having infinite tries means he's gotta do it right  sooner or later. Henry also points out that you'd   want to get out of the loop because the repetition  and the isolation would take a toll on you,   and Mark denies it, saying you'd be the king of  the world. In reality though, he does have moments   where he feels lonely, especially when he has  to avoid having an important talk with his dad.   Mark keeps going trying with Phoebe at the pool  every day until one afternoon, Margaret steps   in and catches the ball before it hits Phoebe.  Shocked by having something different happening,   Mark follows her on her way out, but she gets in  a car and drives away before he can talk to her.   In the subsequent loops, Mark begins looking for  her, desperate to know if someone else is stuck   with him. He waits by the pool but she doesn't  return there, and he also tries the number on the   missing dog flier she dropped before leaving,  but it's not hers. After many failed tries,   Mark happens to be visiting a restaurant when he  notices a manga volume and a hundred dollar bill   have carelessly been left on a table. Guessing  it could've only been her, he rushes outside,   and after believing for a second that he lost her  in the bus, he actually finds Margaret resting   against the wall. Awkwardly but determined, Mark  asks about the time loop, and Margaret confirms   she's also been stuck in it. They chat awkwardly  about their experience, agreeing that it feels   like being the only people awake while everyone  else is asleep, but Margaret wants to leave,   not interested in befriending Mark. Not wanting  to lose the only person that understands, Mark   convinces her to stay a little longer by showing  her some funny things he's discovered around town,   like a dog stealing a man's phone.  When Margaret gets an important call,   she truly needs to leave now, but Mark gets her to  share her number so they can find each other again   later. Before the day resets at twelve a.m., Mark  memorizes Margaret's number, which fortunately he   still remembers after the loop kicks in. He begins  trying out different hairstyles and sending her   pictures, but she doesn't reply until he actually  asks her to meet up. Then they begin sharing a   little more about each other: Mark is supposed  to be in summer school but he's only gone twice.   His dream is to go to art school, but his parents  are obsessed with putting him in honors math,   and he wishes the loop wasn't happening on the  day Daniel wants to talk about his son's future.   Margaret, on the other hand, is in AP and dreams  of becoming an astronaut. They also share what   crazy things they've been doing during the loop.  Mark has hopped a freight train and ridden his   bicycle through school. Margaret has put her chess  app on maximum difficulty, but she hasn't managed   to beat it yet; she also stole her friend's  car and has been teaching herself to drive.   Her favorite thing though, is something in the  forest outside town, so she takes Mark there   to show him. This special moment consists of a  bird flying down the lake and easily catching a   fish with its claws, which Mark agrees is amazing.  After chatting for a while, Margaret drives Mark   home and leaves when yet again, she receives an  urgent call on her phone from a man called Jared.   On the next reset, Mark takes Margaret to watch  the skate rats - although most of them suck at it,   one particular skater manages to pull a trick  nicely, which Mark finds as interesting as   the bird. Afterward, the duo rides a steamroller  through the streets while Mark tries to find out   who this Jared guy is, but Margaret only tells him  he's a med student. Later, while having an absurd   amount of fast food and ice cream at a restaurant,  Mark confesses that he thinks this is what living   in the loop is about: most of life is junk, but  like this, they can discover how amazing life can   be if they wanted it to. This gives him an idea:  maybe they should find all the tiny perfect things   in town and collect them. Margaret is skeptical  because she doesn't want to seize the day as   Mark does, she only wants to go through it, but  she gives in when he points out they only have   each other and the loop should be meaningful.  Their first deed is to leave random dollar bills   around the store for people to find while they  discuss some theories about the fourth dimension,   which Margaret doesn't think it's time - she  thinks they're the shadows of the fourth dimension   people. She also shows Mark what a 4D cube would  look like by drawing it on the store's window.   Afterward, their loops are spent  looking for cool stuff around town.   They accept any moment they find unique, like an  elderly woman dancing after winning a card game,   a man gaining wings when a van stops behind him,  and a janitor pausing his work to play the piano.   Every now and then, Margaret also drags Mark to  the library to teach him math. No matter what   they do though, Margaret always leaves when  she gets that call from Jared, even when she   admits she doesn't want the day to end and would  rather have time broken forever. After an evening   spent freaking out his dad with joke answers  regarding his future and showing him a tattoo,   Mark wakes up to a new day determined to find out  who this Jared guy is. The internet shows him a   picture of a staff member at the local hospital,  which makes Mark feel insignificant. He decides   to visit Henry for advice on how to tackle these  feelings he's developing for Margaret, so Henry   gives him some ideas. This should be done through  a stealth date - begin with the usual hanging out   and increasingly make it more romantic by the  second until the perfect moment for a kiss comes   up. And this stealth date should be something that  shows Mark truly understands her. Lots of planning   and bribing the kids in the art department  later, Mark takes Margaret to his school gym,   where he has put up a mock-up of Tranquility Base  for her. They spend the afternoon playing around,   pretending to be in space and eating astronaut  food, they also ride a bicycle through the school   corridors together. Afterward, they stop by Mark's  house, where he tells Margaret a little more about   his family. His mother works all day, so the  downside of the loop is that he hasn't seen her   in forever because she leaves when he's waking up,  and his dad recently quit his job to write a book   about the Civil War. However, Margaret dodges  the subject of her own parents, so the duo ends   up watching a movie instead. Margaret takes the  chance to look around his desk to admire his art,   and that's how she finds a map he's drawn marking  all the perfect moments they've found around town.   She's quite impressed, especially when he admits  he makes it every morning while hoping to find   some sort of pattern, but so far he hasn't noticed  anything. Now that the two of them are sitting   closely and having a cute moment over the map,  Mark tries to kiss Margaret, but she pulls back   and says she can't. Mark tries to understand why,  thinking it may be Jared and there's something   Margaret isn't telling him, which makes her snap.  She explains that since they're stuck together,   they shouldn't do anything to mess it up, so  the perfect thing collection should be enough.   After a devastated Mark agrees to just be friends,  Margaret leaves to take her usual phone call.   The following reset, Mark is in a bad mood,  so he doesn't do his usual predictions through   breakfast. He does however ask his dad how  his mom is doing, getting "fine" as an answer.   Afterward, he walks normally to Henry's so he  can share all his feelings with a friendly ear,   but since Henry doesn't understand what's  going on, it only frustrates Mark more.   When he returns home later, Mark is cornered by  Daniel trying to have the talk about his future.   Not being able to take it anymore, Mark finally  snaps and yells at his dad, telling him he has no   future because time is broken, and that it isn't  fair that he isn't allowed to go to art school   when Daniel quit his job to write a midlife crisis  book. Then, Mark tries to go to his room, but he's   bothered by Emma's violin practice, so he goes to  her room instead to ask her to stop. After putting   the violing away, Emma takes the chance to ask him  how the talk went, not believing what she hears   when Mark replies that he hates that his dad quit  to follow his dreams but he can't do the same.   Emma explains that Daniel didn't quit,  he was fired - not because he messed up,   they just didn't need him anymore, so  he won't admit it because he's ashamed.   Their mother is mad at Daniel for losing the job  but she won't say anything either because it's   too mean, and Daniel doesn't mind the idea of  Mark going to art school, it's just that they   can't afford it right now. In Emma's opinion, Mark  would know all this stuff if he would think about   someone else besides himself for a change.  Feeling bad for not paying more attention,   Mark asks her about her soccer game, in which  they lost three to nothing. On the next reset,   Mark goes to see his Algebra teacher Mr. Pepper,  who doesn't remember him because he only went to   class twice. Mark asks him what could possibly  cause a time loop and shares a bunch of theories   he found on the internet, going from wormholes to  magical curses. Mr. Pepper rejects them all except   for the theory of singularity, which he admits  could be reasonably possible. Now Mark thinks   that the only thing he needs to do to get out of  the loop is to get in a plane and fly out of it.   The next time he meets with Margaret, they realize  they've found every perfect moment in town yet   time hasn't restarted. Mark is frustrated but she  doesn't understand why, considering they're truly   free in a world of zombies, but this isn't working  for Mark anymore. He wants the things he makes to   last longer than a day and experience having a  career, so to distract him from those thoughts,   Margaret takes him to a show house. The duo then  proceeds to destroy everything inside the house,   which is lots of fun but Mark still brings up the  subject of leaving the loop after they're done.   Margaret points out that adulthood is just getting  stuck in a boring routine so it isn't worth it   when they can have all the time in the world,  but Mark responds they actually don't have time   because time is the stuff that when you spend  it, you don't get it back. Hearing those words   makes Margaret accept to try out Mark's plan, so  the next morning, they get on a plane to Tokyo.   However Margaret is nervous, and when Mark starts  fooling around with a sleep mask, she takes the   chance to escape. When Mark realizes she's gone  it's too late, the plane is already taking off,   although he receives a text from her with an  apology. He decides to spend the flight making   some art, and when the time comes to cross the  International Date Line, he braces himself to   see what happens. Sadly, it doesn't work,  and he wakes up once again on the same day.   When he goes downstairs to have breakfast,  he's behaving in a much calmer way, and that   gets him a nicer reaction from his sister, which  is new. Noticing how being more polite gives him   better results, he asks Daniel about his book,  which gets a friendly chat going. Afterward,   Mark goes with his dad to watch Emma's soccer  match, and this time, they do manage to score.   This inspires Mark to go through the loop in  a different, more altruistic way. He gifts the   winning lottery ticket to a random woman, uses  the excavator to rescue a cat from a tree, dances   with the elderly woman, claps for the music the  janitor plays, and actually goes to Algebra class.   This time he manages to impress Mr. Pepper  thanks to all the tutoring he got from Margaret.   He also spends better time with Henry and  Emma, and even joins the skaters to try to   pull off a stair trick, but he ends up falling  and breaking his wrist. While in the hospital,   after getting his wrist cast, Mark is  surprised by seeing Margaret around.   He decides to follow her and finally finds out  what truly has kept Margaret back all this time:   her mother Greta is dying of cancer. The next  time the day resets, Mark wakes up with tears   in his eyes, and he runs outside to stop the  car and hug his mom before she leaves for work.   Afterward, he visits Henry and while they  play videogames together, he tells him all   about Margaret. Mark used to think this was a  love story and he was the hero, but actually,   this story has always been Margaret's, who only  wants time to stay frozen so her mom doesn't die.   Speaking of Margaret, she's visiting Greta right  now. She admits she keeps thinking about a boy and   that she messed that up, so Greta reminds her that  it's never too late to make things right. Later,   she's losing at chess again while sitting on  the spot that gives her the angel wings from the   perfect moment, and that's when she sees it: the  missing dog just walking around the neighborhood.   Margaret rescues him but doesn't take him to his  owner because he'll be lost again the next day.   She realizes Mark was right:  everything they fix gets broken again.   Instead, she decides to visit Henry and teach  him how to beat the videogame. The character   dying over and over but eventually finding the  key to continue helps her have an epiphany:   death is terrible, but if you don't face it, then  you end up losing yourself too. A map appears   on the tv screen, and that also gives Margaret  an idea. She remembers Mark saying the perfect   moments could create a pattern that he didn't  find, so she gets a map of the town and starts   marking down all the tiny things to find the  pattern herself. After revisiting all the moments   and looking at the map for hours, she thinks  something is missing, and that is time. Using   string, she creates a three-dimensional model  of the times and places of the perfect moments,   the shadow of which forms a 4D cube. It's missing  a vertex though, so she makes some calculations   and finds out the final moment will be at seven  p.m. at the pool. During the next loop, Margaret   visits Greta to express her fears of losing her,  but Greta promises her she'll be fine and that she   can do this if she allows herself to enjoy all of  life's perfect moments. Afterward, Margaret goes   to the pool a few minutes before seven and finds  Mark there. She tells him about the pattern, but   Mark confesses he knows about Greta so he doesn't  want to leave the loop anymore because he can't do   that to her. Moved by his words, Margaret shares  a little secret: the night before the loop began,   she was told Greta didn't have much time  left, so she just wished for time to stop.   Apparently, something or someone out there  listened to her and granted her the wish. Then   Mark showed up, and she didn't understand why,  but now she knows: this way, when it's time to go,   she doesn't have to go alone. Margaret admits she  was wrong and they were the ones sleeping while   everyone else lived, so it's time to wake up.  After declaring this is the last perfect moment,   Margaret kisses Mark. Afterward, Margaret goes to  the hospital to say her final goodbye to Greta.   She leaves the building holding hands with  Mark, and together they wait for the clock   to hit twelve a.m. When it suddenly starts  raining, they confirm they've finally gotten   out of the loop. The next morning, they find the  missing dog and return him to his owner together.