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I really enjoyed Lain as a work of speculative fiction, especially watching it in 2019 and being able to compare and contrast the portrayal of computer's effects on society with what "actually" happened as we moved more and more of our lives onto the internet.
The "actual" story/plot (message?) only really came together after watching a long YouTube video (actually, I read the transcript / script as a blog post so it wasn't as long for me to get through it). If I had had the patience I think I would have preferred rewatching until I "got" it, but there's so much else out there to experience. Maybe some day I'll sit down and do a "proper" rewatch.
A good part of the initial enjoyment for me was the vibes and letting the different scenes slowly add up onto each other in the back of my mind.
As others have said in this thread already, it's not necessarily the most coherent nor meaningful story as it is conveyed. Being depressed can unironically help it make sense (though I would never ever recommend getting depressed just to better understand Lain or any story really, your mental wellbeing is more important!).
The shots of telephone lines with audio of power line hums and the weird purple/red splotches are probably some of my favorite bits, and they're what I immediately think of whenever Lain gets brought up.
Can you link it? If you still remember what/where it was...
Finally managed to track it down! https://skapbadoa.com/2018/02/19/explaining-iwakura-lain/
The only good ressource I found apart from that link is the following 15-year-old website: https://www.cjas.org/~leng/lain.htm
This is it, this is the shit I'm talking about: