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I just saw this movie for the first time the other day and I had to pause. I don't recall ever crying that hard during a movie before. Using gravitational time-dilation to create tragedy? Genius, and it broke my heart.
I will never, ever get tired of listening to this soundtrack. Hans Zimmer apparently choose to base the music around a pipe organ, because he and Christopher Nolan believed that space will be the cathedral of humanity's future, and what else evokes a cathedral if not majestic organ music. Love that so much.
Não sou fluente mas consigo entender cada sentimento durante os reacts, interestelar é intenso o suficiente pra ultrapassar culturas e línguas diferentes ❤
4:25 In the US in the 1930's bad farming practices and sever droughts lead to The Dust Bowl. Which was about a decade of really bad dust/dirt storms (just like what is happening in the movie).
And all but the first person talking about the dust are actually clips from the Ken Burns documentary on the dust bowl so they actually lived through the dust bowl
Yeahh, Im in Kansas, born and raised. It was awful for our grandparents. It's getting super dry and we aren't having a ton of rain again, they think something similar could happen again someday. Yikes.
Wormholes (or Einstein-Rosen bridges) aren't scientifically tested, because we never seen one, but they are scientifically possible, one of the men who theorized the existence of traversable wormholes (also called Morris-Thorne wormholes) is Kip Thorne, the scientific consultant and producer of the movie, Nobel Prize for Physics 2017 for the discover of the gravitational waves.
Miller's Planet, being closest to the black hole, would naturally have incredible tides. Waves grow bigger the shallower the water, as is the case with Tsunamis (ripples over deep water, walls closer to shore). Over time, all land masses have been scoured and leveled. Likely the entire planet is this foot or two of water over smooth bottom. Meanwhile, gravitation from the black hole just continually pulls tides that sweep the planet surface and maintain the depth and flatness.
Yea seemed like you missed that Anne Hathaway character was going to the last planet to where her “love” was located (who turned out to be dead). Coop was using the thrusters to help her get to the planet and then he went home. Also, I love watching your channel, your feelings and energy are def something else!
The issue with a lot of "reactors" are that they keep thinking about "I need to react or say something" so much that they actually have no idea what is actually happening in the movie. Granted, there's a lot going on in this movie.. But nah.. They miss too much and it makes them seem ignorant in a sense. It's a shame.. But hopefully they read the criticism they get in the comments and adapt to it in time to grow / get better at their content.
@@Steelburgh Yeah but the foreshadowing to his death was highly telegraphed, even before they went to the water "every hour is seven years" planet his transmitter had already stopped broadcasting. Technically he had died before the person on the water planet did even though he "existed" for a longer time than her relatively, she was drowning as they were discussing how to get to the surface without losing time themselves, since it had been 10 years since she landed on the water planet, only a minute and a half had passed when they reached the planet. There's about ten minutes between each tidal swell, since they landed between tidal swells and she had only been there for a minute and a half, she had drowned in the tidal swell about 30 to 60 seconds before they landed, struggling in the water for the past minute (7 years). If they had found her body, it's likely she could have been revived since she only died a minute after landing, if they prioritized her body over the data they would have gotten to her 2-3 minutes after drowning, and could have revived her without major brain damage risk
@@Steelburgh I read somewhere in Wiki that Edmund died by rockslide when he was in his hypersleep not long after sending the signal to be rescued (and the data that his planet is habitable) not by old age. Besides, hypersleep slower their aging.
It was 23 years which means they were down on the planet for a little over 3 hours. The ship Romily stayed on was outside the zone of the gravitation pull that causes that time difference.
Another fun fact is that they used loads of practical sets and miniatures. The sets make the actors act better and the miniatures makes it looks very realistic.
That music is actually made with a big ass church organ. The idea was that it represents breaths of air. There's a fun 'making of' video with Hanz Zimmer on it.
@@LtDan-rk4siThat's pretty interesting. Never thought about it that way. Churches have such a negative influence that I never though of admiring the technical aspects of them. While reading the wiki though, I found an interesting reference. Church organs are rusting. Apparently they started to rust in the last few decades. The culprit seems to be modern heating. When churches heat up by central heating, acid from oak releases into the air and ends up in the pipes. The wind systems of the organs are made of oak, they have to be replaced. Or the heat turned off :)
The more i think about it I can't rely deny that this is probably my favorite movie ever. It has absolutely everything I want to experience from a film.
Time dilation is 100% real. Someone traveling at the speed of light away from you will appear to never age, while someone coming towards you will appear to age twice as fast. This is why there's the old adage that you age slower while flying cuz teeeechnically, it's true, albeit only by petoseconds.
Hey Blue, what an awesome reaction to "Interstellar", The amazing thing about Chris Nolan's writing is the level of emotional intelligence he assumes the audience has. We all know Copper loves his daughter. --------- He says, "The first thing you learn about being a parent, is making sure your child is safe and protected. That includes not telling a ten-year-old girl, that the world is coming to an end."--------- In this exchange of dialogue Nolan is showing how Cooper specifically loves and care for Murph in ways too deep to comprehend. -------- By the end of the movie we know he would travel the universe to save his daughter and the rest of humanity.
the idea of gravity being able to spread beyond our universal membrane or brane for short, is a current idea in string theory and M-theory, where other particles except gravitons are connected loops with this membrane, but gravitons are open loops and thus able to pass through them. The idea of things being able to move between branes, such as wormholes or the tesseract, are also current ideas that could be considered possible in the far future. The idea of gravity being solved by string theory and M-theory, what is called quantum gravity, is why string theory was seen as a contender for a theory of everything, as it allowed the combination of two competing physics, General Relativity from Einstein, and Quantum Physics/Mechanics, which string theory solves by having particles be made of strings or vibrations.
Anyone else totally miss what Trixy was saying in the intro cuz they were too busy staring at super cute kitten? Not your fault Blue, Dimi is just too adorable lol
Another movie you should try which is as thought provoking and emotional as this movie is “Arrival”, also a critically acclaimed scifi film by Denis Villanueve. He also directed Dune
Coop HAD to send ALL the messages they got or it'd create a paradox, if he didn't go, he couldn't send the data to Murph, so, she couldn't solve the Gravity issue, Humanity dies. Similar to the grandfather paradox if you travel back in time and kill your grandfather before your mother/father is born you won't exist to travel back in time to commit Murder.. 2014 Interstellar... Audience screaming KILL MATT DAMON!!!! 2015 The Martian.. Audience screaming SAVE MATT DAMON!!!!! What a difference a year makes :P In all seriousness you really REALLY should watch The Martian soon...
I mean, true. Interstellar is best appreciated on Imax with surround sound blasting. If your eardrums don't hurt from Zimmer's score at the end, you're doing it wrong. 🤣
Your reactions are kind of cold-hearted. But still thanks for watching it. One of my favorite movies of all time. It's growing on me more than Inception when it first released. Might be the best Nolan film. The icy planet that they land on is filmed in my home country Iceland it's very nostalgic. And yes it is that frosty right now even in February. The name Dr. Mann (Matt Damon's character) is even based on an Icelandic word called maður (man). Just some interesting facts. I love when the movie doesn't hold your hand the entire time and makes you think and use your brain which happens a lot of the time in Nolan's plots. He is a very good storyteller and keeps your attention fully from beginning to end without being boring or tedious. Not a lot of directors can do that. He is talented and Hans Zimmer's musical score is out of this world. How did he not win an Oscar...
black holes are theorized to be the reasons why galaxies formed in the first place. They were the first stars, and the largest stars due to the huge amount of material created by the big bang, at least 380,000 years after it when everything dissipated from plasma to gas. These stars were so huge, they exploded into supernovae and collapsed into black holes, that drew smaller stars around it, creating the galaxies as we know them today. Multiple explosions of supernovae also sent material made inside those stars from hydrogen to iron through normal fusion, and higher stuff up to at least silver in the supernovae, and beyond gold with neutron stars colliding, that heavier atomic material became the first rocky planets, asteroids, moons and comets. These supernovae around the black hole also collided more hydrogen gas together creating new generations of stars.
One of the best movies of its kind. Now, you should watch "Contact" with Jodie Foster, based on a book of the same name written by none other than Carl Sagan, and you should wrap the journey with 2001 Space Odyssey.
Hey Blue, I know family means the world to you. -------- "Interstellar" takes you on a journey so profound it makes you rethink the ties you have with your family. -------- It makes you ponder to what lengths one would go to in fulfilling a promise to your loved one, especially a child. --------- I believe this is why the movie and its theme of parental love and sacrifice resonate with you so deeply. -------- Great, amazing, heartfelt reaction.
The description of the dust, dust storms, people (especially kids with still developing lungs) having deadly breathing issues & all is based in reality. In the 1930s the "Dust Bowl" happened in the U.S. Midwest due to overfarming areas not built for it. It was an ecological disaster that contributed to (not only cause of course, but a big part) the economic Depression of the 40s. You can read history books about it & see photos, but there are actual audio & video tapes taken by government scientists & academics where they later went back & interviewed survivors to learn not just any clues as to the cause but also to study health & daily life impact & how it affected everyone psychologically too. It's very scary to think of something wiping out plant life around the world & causing a worldwide version of that. 🙀
Ey Trixy - Donno if you still are a comment looker but when you asked "Is this real?" to the dust, it actually was a big problem in the American midwest. Look up the "dustbowl", it created conditions exactly like this. There was an overabundance of hares (rabbits) too, to the point where it was like swarms of locusts. Literally so much that people had to do something as it was actually changing the entire environment - so as a horde that seemed like an ocean of rabbits passed they had to club them with sticks for hours and all sorts of stuff. It is quite a historical spectacle although obscure and brushed over, I think it's worth looking into just a little bit at least lol
47:15 "half of this movie was me being emotional about it, the other half was me being confused about it. because i don't know anything about these things." almost none of us do.
Look at carefully to Planet at 21:33 You hear the sound of tick tock? The background sound .. So that sound tells us something.. Brilliant Christopher Nolan's idea.. Every tick tock sound at that planet tells us passing 1 day on earth.. Amazing detail...
Hey Blue, Christopher Nolan and Jonathan Nolan are such masters at making the viewer feel the deepest most profound thoughts as we live and connect through the characters in this movie.--------- You were losing it way before the 23 year video log scene.-------- I said when Murphy shows up Blue is going to lose it for sure and will be torn to shreds. As many have said, "There are not enough tissues for this flick. ------- Great Reaction, I love you passion in this one for sure.
when you were saying "it didnt work" when he was in the bookshelf he doesnt realize that his current actions in the tesseract are literally putting into play events that unfolded from the past. hes so distracted by his regret and emotion and focusing so hard on trying to change the events that hes watching from the past unfold in front of him again that he doesnt realize this. when he was banging on the book shelf screaming "no no no" in response to watching himself leave murph he was just reacting to what he was watching because he realizes what a huge mistake it was to ever leave. that is the brilliance of this twist imo. we literally watch him put anamolies into existence as a result of his current remorse of watching the events play back. so he doesnt make the connection at first that he was the one was who sent the message "stay" either and its not until he realizes he was sent here to communicate with murph and the 3 dimensional world that he knowingly creates the rest of the anamolies like the sand coordinates and the morse code in the watch. and i also had to go back and rewatch to undertsand that all the anamolies lead up to cooper being in the tesseract and then the final and only anamolie that he creates in present time (in the tesseract) is to code the eqaution for solving gravity into the hand of the watch using morse code (which is what dr brand and murph were trying to solve all this time) which allows murph to launch the space station that dr brand and his team were working on into space and create their space station environments like we see cooper wake up to after the space rangers find him floating in space after he was ejected from the black hole and finished the job of putting the anamolies into place with the help of the 5th dimension beings. it is also hypothesized that the 5th dimension beings are cooper and dr brand super far into the future after they colonize edmunds and also why cooper says "we brought ourselves" and "theyre not beings, theyre us" when he talks to Tars in the tesseract. such a mind fuck of a twist that i had to watch the movie several times (willingly ofcourse lol) to really understand all those little details. also fun fact the director james dolan got the idea for the movie when he noticed his watch was acting stangely and sure enough the watch used in the movie is his actual watch lol
That huge wave? You know how high the tidal waves can get here from just a little moon? .. That planet orbits a black hole... And he had to eject the shuttle he was in to push the other way, or the remaining ship wouldn't have had enough speed to clear the black hole.
21:55 unfortunately due to the "movie" aspect of that part, not all of the hours were shown in it's entirety. It's sorta assumed that they took quite a bit to fly to the planet, land, assess where they were and then wait for the ship to drain. All of which took around 3 hours considering the time dilation of 23 years :/
That's the issue with knowledge and it's wealth. Not everyone is ready... or accepting of information that isn't quantifiable or in this case..understandable. there will be something new every year or everyday, and the brain can only adapt with the spark of learning or challenging to act and achieve a goal to take it. We still have challenges as a species and how we take it in, goodluck.
If you enjoyed this one, you may like these as well : [1995-JUN-30] APOLLO 13 [Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, Bill Paxton, Gary Sinese, Ed Harris] [2013-OCT-04] GRAVITY [Sandra Bullock, George Clooney, Ed Harris] [2016-DEC-21] PASSENGERS [Jennifer Lawrence, Chris Pratt] Then there is the classic : [1970-JUN-24] 2001 : A SPACE ODYSSEY
OOMMMGMGGG THE LIL KITTY CATS SO CUUUUTEEEE I love that beanbag or whatever it is so much I got way too distracted by the cat lmfao Underrated moment of this movie is when cooper checks under the blankets expecting maybe hoping she was there. Also everyone always assumes millers planet is all water and asks why would they land…we don’t even see enough to say there’s more water than our oceans. The reason THEY’RE caught off guard that there’s water specifically there is because they were getting a signal from miller they thought was saying it was habitable. I believe that’s why annes character went to still go get the data because there was still a chance it was habitable in some way. People forget these are PLANETS and we only see one small part of them
I watched almost half a dozen first time watching videos before I recognized that Murph was the old woman being interviewed at the beginning of the movie
Mann set the bomb to react to a human pressing the button, knowing he would not be the one to press it. This was because he didn't want to risk someone retrieving the data before they saved him, learning that he lied when he reported the planet hospitable. Else, they may not have rescued him for his betrayal. Self-preservation.
12:48 - That right there is a man swearing an oath to his daughter. He would not let the armies of Heaven and Hell stand in his way of returning to her.
The stuff in the beginning about the dust storms is likely inspired by the Dust bowl era in the USA. Crop failure, improper agricultural practices, and drought lead to much of the midwest drying out and sand/dust storms becoming common. This coincided with the stock market crash of the 1930s and exacerbated The Great Depression.
Black holes don't suck. They have a gravity well the same as any other object in space and a specific distance at which you would "fall in", dictated by the mass of the object, which for a black hole is immense. But you can technically orbit a black hole the same you could anything else. Of course the radiation would destroy everything and is always ignored in these movies
my guess on the explosion is, it wasn't intentional, it was just he took him apart so terribly that he accidently blew up when they tried to get more info from him.
Wow! It does get complex. The first time I saw this, I thought I was tracking most of the way, but I still had a couple of things I couldn't answer. So, I had to cheat and look it up. Just look around. There's plenty of stuff out there to explain whatever you don't understand. It actually meant so much to Christopher Nolan to at least get the science plausible, that he had physicists that wrote and published a book explaining the physics behind the concept to show that it was a theoretical possibility. I haven't read it, and I'm sure most of it would go right over my head, but since I looked up the crib notes, let me just throw this bit at you to be a little more specific about who "they" were, which I never would've figured out on my own. So, imagine a potential reality where Professor Brandt knows that he can't solve the problem of gravity, and comes up with Plan A as a means to carry out Plan B, knowing full well that Plan A will fail, which it does, but Brandt does make it to Edmund's planet, which is where her heart wants her to go to begin with, and carries out Plan B insuring the continuation of the human species. Those humans created by Plan B, the children of Brandt, if you will, eventually, over however much time it would take for such a thing to happen, evolve into a higher species that are capable of understanding and existing in a world beyond the 4th dimensional world that we're capable of comprehending. Since the only thing that can supposedly transcend space and time is gravity, they can't communicate with us directly, but they can use their knowledge and technology to use gravity to create the wormhole, tesseract, etc. that give us the tools necessary for us to make Plan A succeed on our own. Essentially, they're reaching across space and time in a retroactive attempt at resurrecting their own long-lost ancestors! Why would they do such a thing? Love. You know, the kind of love that didn't exist when their ancestors were facing extinction and could have used it to at least ensure the future of the species, if not themselves, which required Professor Brandt to create the con of Plan A in order to carry out Plan B, so that they themselves could exist, and that hopefully has become a thing that an evolved form of humanity is capable of! The kind of love that can extend across space and time to others you don't even know. You know. real love that isn't just self-serving. Love!
I like this explanation and will try to keep it in mind the next time I watch the film! Just adding to your point about the involvement of physicists, the entire movie was developed in collaboration with Kip Thorne. He's a very renowned theoretical physicist who has been studying and researching cosmological phenomena--with a focus on gravity--for decades, and even has a Nobel prize for his work. He worked directly with Christopher Nolan even while the film was being written to ensure that everything in the story was not only plausible, but represented as realistically as possible based on humanity's most up-to-date knowledge of the fundamental laws of nature. His equations were used by the visual effects team to model the black hole through which the characters traveled, which resulted in the most sophisticated simulation ever created of a black hole. It was so good, in fact, that it was subsequently adopted by NASA and the broader scientific community to use as the basis for further research.
@@reasonablefacsimile right on! Thanks! Yeah. I only used the word plausible to not be so definitive because I know it's always likely that there's someone that's going to pop up and be argumentative if I do, and I don't care enough to get into a pissing contest about it.
Oh, I forgot to mention... not everything in the movie is realistic, per se, for a handful of reasons: 1. Some deviations were necessary for storytelling purposes. (E.g, macroscopic objects would be torn apart by a black hole/wormhole, per our current understanding.) 2. Some phenomena are too complex to represent visually. (You can't show 5 dimensions!) 3. Some details were (and are) still beyond human understanding. (No example for this one. I haven't watched recently enough!)
@@richiecabral3602Our previous replies must've crossed paths, as I didn't see yours before posting mine. I definitely get where you're coming from, and I didn't mean to critique your choice of wording, if it came across that way. 🙊 I just got caught up in trying to convey how awesome I think the whole thing is. 🙃
The first time I saw it, I didn’t really care for it. Because I didn’t understand a lot of it. As I’ve watched it several more times through the years, now I understand it all and I love it.