Cada teoria que cubrimos, organizada por franquicia y por tipo.
Christopher Nolan's production designers don't place clocks randomly — when you map visible timestamps against script timelines, a pattern emerges that's too consistent to be coincidence. Someone in that crew is doing the work.
From Ariel to Moana, Disney's princess narratives follow a hidden pattern: the rescue is actually a recruitment. Each heroine is displaced from her community and absorbed into a new power structure, and the soundtracks quietly acknowledge the cost.
The codename theory isn't dead. A systematic look at the evidence that 'James Bond' is an identity assigned by MI6, not a single man -- and why even Skyfall doesn't break it.
A deep analysis of the Time Variance Authority in Loki. The Sacred Timeline wasn't being preserved -- it was being harvested. Every pruned variant made the multiverse weaker, not safer.
Pixar's most effective antagonists aren't wrong about the problem they identify. They're wrong about what to do about it. That distinction is the studio's most consistent and underappreciated argument.
The Force isn't moral. Every time one side grew too powerful, it generated a correction: Anakin to destroy the Jedi, Luke to destroy the Sith, Rey to destroy the remnants. The pattern is equilibrium maintenance through targeted demolition.