While the holographic interface is interesting this film shows who illusory every thing that man creates is. We'd like to think that what we create has a permanence, a solidity to it, this is not true: while what man creates can last for many centuries every thing must decay in time and that is what in my view was shown to effect here.
While the work was short, it had great power to it as well, the woman's sadness when see got up after looking at the flower is in my view representative of not only not been able to find the man she loves [IMHO], as he hid him self from her the entire time; as well as been a representation at the subconscious level of what ever neurological condition she had.
This feeling of loneliness was enforced by the lack of other people in the holographic world, which to me if you have a computer system to do those things as shown it should be able to do other people with comparative ease; however it is meant to be an environment to add in neurological recovery so one can presume that the treatment regimen would call for treatment without over stimulation.
Regards to.
Cyber-Angel