The White Wolf said:
Here are two things that stood out to me big time:
1. MiB saying "I understand the visceral pleasure of revenge more than most..." as he pleads with the soldiers holding him and Teddy hostage. I would add this to William=MiB, as I'm sure it'll come full circle when we see Logan go even one step further than their argument in Pariah and give William a need for vengeance. Would also make sense in the fact that he got his revenge over him by eventually taking over the company in some manner.
2. When Ford sees the maze on the table where the men are playing dominoes, it seems as it's not something he put there. This is even backed up when he immediately goes through Arnold's old notebook and flips to the page after Dolores and examines what Arnold had written about the maze. What's interesting here is the maze and Ford's new story line are two separate things (from what I understand at least because there was questions concerning the maze before Ford even began implementing the new story line) but how do they fit together and do they at all is the real question. The maze being Arnold's work also lends more evidence to this idea that those scenes with Bernard and Dolores are indeed actually with Arnold when considering him introducing Dolores to the maze.
What I find strange though, is what Teddy says to MiB about the maze. "the maze is an old native myth. The maze itself is the sum of a man's life. The choices he makes, the dreams he hangs on to. And there at the center, there's a legendary man who had been killed over and over again countless times, but always clawed his way back to life. The man returned for the last time and vanquished all his oppressors in a tireless fury. He built a house. Around that house he built a maze so complicated, only he could navigate through it. I'd reckon he'd seen enough of fighting." You have to wonder if these are Arnold's words or Ford's...
I like your ideas.
1. No idea if this is how it plays out, but it's an interesting scenario. Personally I'm all in on William as MiB.
2. I agree the maze is Arnold's work & not put there by Ford. I agree it predates the new storyline (by about 34 years).
Not sold on Bernard & Delores is actually Arnold & Delores initially introducing her to the concepts. They certainly could go in that direction, I just don't think they will.
I think the native maze myth is:
a. elements left behind by Arnold, potentially just now manafesting themselves.
b. something which organically grew amongst the robots over time. Arnold left bits & pieces; which the Natives extrapolated & put together over time in a way that made sense to their perspective.
c. some combination
D. something else?