@@kielsee5191 actually not only movies characters and even tv series add something to your life rolemodel new information about life and choose the way of your life it helps
It makes you feel a sense of wonder and existential crisis and makes you question reality as you know it. That’s the best way I can put that feeling into words
I was just thinking that I can’t believe Hans didn’t get a mention. The score in this film is a major part and epic. It has some incredible scenes which would not have had the impact without the score.
@John Frylock I doubt he turned him down. He probably signed up for Dune before Tenet and it would to show Nolan unjustice if he haphazard it, although Zimmer haphazard would probably still turn into greatness. I have to say that until this point I am not so fond of Ludwig Gorransson, so I hope he changes my mind and only appears as a temporary substitute for Zimmer.
I didn't hate it but really was not into it. To me the epicness and emotion felt forced. The fact that the science wasn't totally wrong to me didn't make up for how inaccurate the actual details were. It's like saying that a moose is a small mammal. It's not the largest mammal and it's a mammal, but goddamn it is not small. It's true that being near a black whole will cause you to age slower, but the way it was depicted in the film was to me uncomfortably inaccurate.
Forcing Google+ Makes Me Feel Better About the Spying It wasn't about science for me. That's not what made it powerful, it was the deeper meaning that got me!
You're totally right. It took me until near the end of the film to really get what the point of it was. But it was so long and tried so hard to be epic. If they had shortened it and focused more on the family it for me would have had more impact. When they spend so long talking about the science and it's bullshit it really kills it for me. The Martian did the little details so well that it really put me more in the world of the movie and made me care about the characters.
***** It may be because he is illiterate af that's why he couldn't figure out wtf is happening in the movie or his favorite director must be Michael bay and he likes to watch nonsensical bullshit like teenage turtles or transformers
Sorry , you're not even close it's not one of the greatest movies , it's the greatest movie that's ever made and it'll remain like forever that's because the highest aspiration for humans is space and that combined with father daughter love with amazing screenplay and jaw dropping music so yeah it can't beat
@Marshmello I'm sorry for you, but movie critics are 100% ok. Interstellar is just for people that understand just Spongebob. if one has a bit of brain, all the crap Insterstellar is filled with can't go unnoticed
Shitisleip - that depends. Most movies (unless they are more biographical or reality based stories), sci fi ones specially, follow their own specific rules. If they are done well in the story then it could work. At the end of the day, they are still fiction. Even hard sci fi is.
Haha I just watched the movie yesterday and still recovering... I'd say he really meant what he said, I mean, the parts with the most important dialogue are barely hearable through the background noise, and by no mistake either. And even when we had a quiet place for them to reveal the hidden mechanics of the movie, and the protagonist asks a vital question, the character (Neil) says we better sleep now....
insaneapples because the Academy is fucking shit nowadays , since Titanic was released and won , the academy nas gone downhill in terms of credibilty , they fucking suck
Lewis Cranston, you have no clue what pretentiousness is, then. Alejandro Innaritu and Christopher Nolan are the opposite of pretentious. They speak emotional truths. Boyhood is the same way. How is showing the power of love in Interstellar and showing true suffering in The Revenant pretentious? Nope. That's the beauty of cinema. Of course it's all subjective and it's your opinion. I just find it sad that's how you see it.
Rethinking it, I respect Nolan as a filmmaker and Interstellar is good except from the ending. But my thoughts on AGI stands the same, Birdman was just trying to be something better than it was like the main character.
I got 2 tickets to watch this in IMAX when it was released. I didn’t know much about interstellar only that it was about time travel, worm holes, black holes etc. I took my 11 year old daughter to watch it with me, not knowing anything about the story about a father and his 11-12 year old daughter. My daughter Aurora cried all the way through it. She was hanging on to my arm right through the film, admittedly I had major tears in a few scenes. My daughter still thinks it’s the best movie she has ever seen and Interstellar is her 2001-A Space Odyssey. Especially the experience of watching it in an IMAX theatre. It’s definitely one of my standout theatre experiences in the last 10 years. My daughter said to me afterwards that I was her “Cooper”. It’s these little things, these little experiences that as a father to 3 daughters and a son makes being a dad so much more rewarding. Hans Zimmers score was incredible.
The reason why this host gets the privilege to interview so much great talent is beyond me. The way he interrupts them so often to ask menial questions is pretty annoying. This is CHRIS NOLAN. Let him finish speaking!!!
They're edited quickly that it seems like interrupting, I think. Either had editing or he has only a limited time, so he has to interrupt, so that he keeps everything on schedule so that he can keep his job. It's a cutthroat business being an interviewer, believe me. I would be more sympathetic towards the guy if I were you.
George Daugherty exactly what the comment above says. I don't think he did interrupt. There were edits that cut off them as they were speaking, not the presenter. They probably talked for twice the length of time as shown here.
His job is to keep the interview on track and interesting. Chris is my favorite director and inspiration, but as a visionary he can sometimes meander off. The interviewer does him a favor by keeping him on point.
Same here. It's up there. I wouldn't call one the best, since I love titles such as Lady Vengeance and Birdman just as much, but it is one of the greatest film experiences I've ever had.
That "scene" with Matthew catching up, absolutely broke me down. Never had I cried to a movie before, but I had to stop it because I felt everything he was conveying, what a tremendous piece of work by everyone.
For me it was his reacting/crying seeing his kids aged in the recordings on the ship. That level of raw acting and emotion I have never seen done anywhere near as good for it just being a person reacting to videos on a monitor. It was a masterclass in acting.
Fact of the movie: Chris Nolan has farmed 500 acres of corn fields for this movie and when the film ended Nolan sold corn fields and made a profit......well one smartest director alive on the planet
Everytime I make a top 10 movie list with my favourite films of all time, I always end up filling it with Nolan films, I can't help it, their just so god damn awesome!
Christopher Nolan takes up 3 spaces in my Top 10. "Inception" definitely, for the idea of doing a "Heist Movie" in someone's mind. "Interstellar", because I have always been into movies that talk about space travel. People have to remember...It's Not Reality! Nothing in the movie has ever happened before! "Memento", probably started out as a "revenge movie", but then worked in the idea of the tattoo's, and that he "made up" part of his history to justify the person who "supposedly" killed his wife.
Haha! I was thinking that I am not much of a sci-fi fan, but my favourite films of all time are both Arrival and Interstellar: themes of fire within the human soul that heats the cold universe...
Lewis Cranston, I would have to greatly disagree. The library scene actually elevates the film to a whole new level and if it ruined the film for you, then you were never a believer in the them of the movie: love is eternal across the universe and pushes to do amazing things. Every person who believes that scene is finally out of places often come from a cynical point of view of life. The library scene is the definition of movie magic at its finest, really.
It’s so good it’s painful. That’s how you know a movie is that good. Only a few movies make me physically and emotionally painful. It’s so good it’s painful.
I’m so glad someone said this. After seeing this movie I truly a pain in my heart just thinking about it... it’s so hard to explain or understand why, it’s just so intensely out of this world beautiful and brilliant. Best film ever made I don’t think anything will ever top it.
Anyone that doesn’t like this movie, in no disrespect, just doesn’t have the brain capacity or capability to imagine what they portrayed in this movie, most people are too dumb to understand relativity, and wormholes, and 5th dimensions, they cannot understand a truly MOVING EXPERIENCE, with BEAUTIFUL AND INCREDIBLE cinematography and special effects. The details of the ticks on the first planet equating to time on earth. They can’t understand how a single tone of music played over and over can incite emotions ranging from happiness to utter sadness and despair. The movie is sci-fi sure, but the core of the movie is a daughter and father. THATS IT.
The singular best film ever made. Maaaaaaaaassive fan of Annie and Jess. Mathew was sensational as well. Screenplay.. directorial work and the sheer beauty of Kip's science behind all of it.. what an absolute masterpiece. Really words cannot do it justice. I ve watched it 5 times by now and I will watch it again many more in the future. My favourite film of all time.
This film is a masterpiece and never ceases to bring me to tears of awe. A truly masterful science fiction film. I hate that so many people don’t know it because it got snubbed of proper attention before, during, and after award season. But this film is a master class on acting, directing, and storytelling.👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
This is the movie that made me fall in love with film. It is completely awe inspiring from start to finish. I laughed, I cried, I cheered, I pondered. This movie gave me a different and unique perspective on love and this life that we live. “It’s not possible” “No, it’s necessary” FUCKING CHILLS EVERY TIME!!
It's not about the accuracy but embracing the notions and the grandeur of imagination that Chris Nolan has. People have hard conveying their thoughts and expressing their feelings in day-to-day life. But Chris Nolan outdoes himself in every aspect. How he portrays his ideas on to the screen is what gets me. It is as imaginative as it gets with Nolan.
I normally like to watch movies like that, space travel, wormholes and black holes but Interstellar is my best movie of all time. Amazing something !!!!
The way Nolan looking at the cast while they are speaking like a father looking at his children proudly they achieved something BIG!, their success is his success.
23:45 wow. Her response about it. I totally agree and have the same opinion. The only mentality even worth having is being positive, hoping for the best, and doing what we can to improve the situation
Christopher Nolanhas always been a huge inspiration of mine as a filmmaker, not only because of how good his films are. But because of how sincere and passionate he is about what he does.
Thank you to those in the making and sharing of this discussion. Now watching in December 2020 and the world has never felt so inhospitable to me, now age 53 with great concern for my son and grandson's future. I thoroughly enjoyed this film, one of my favourites and Matthew McConaughey a favourite actor. I can't help resting on this, my take on the film's meaning/s, so far... I'd like to share my personal take on the film Interstellar, which is that the end of the film explains a moral, a moral that's woven into the fabric of the film from the beginning, becoming a part of the viewers past and towards fruition and enlightenment at the end. Messages are repeated throughout. Brand waits on a planet that appears to represent Cooper's future and fulfilment and, where love has put the past to rest (there were 3 planets, possible futures); it could be said that that planet is love, which is the answer to man kinds survival. At Cooper's daughter's death bed, his daughter says she is letting him go and tells him Brand awaits him in a distant galaxy. In death we travel alone, as we may through our memories to reconcile our past; as happened with characters Brand, Cooper and his daughter. Romiley is able to receive messages from Earth, now in the their past, but unable to send back, hints that we can't affect the past, but our choices in the present do affect the future. Dr Mann on the uninhabitable planet, twists the truth and is willing to kill in fear for his own survival and of his own death. Other than all the descriptions of humanity played out in the film including man kind's greed having caused their world's demise, Brand's father actively pushing hope, actually it is love that saves them, that goes beyond space and time; that love is the equation providing the answers to every human dilemma. Brand says, "Listen carefully, we didn't invent love..."; I believe she suggests we may be love, in which we base our present choices, to change our future destination and transcend our past (Cooper saw he was able to touch on his past with such love, in a way that time altered the future outcome in the minds and hearts of all).
with Christopher Nolan's INTERSTELLAR and its filmmaking......i realised - how much a man can be focused in his work, be it any work!!!! I think that's the real WIN for Nolan..... people getting enlightened in their lives, just by watching the movie!!!
I really like how the cameras positioned in the interview, where i can see other interviewees face expression and reaction to the interviewee who is giving comments.
This video has just upgraded my 'man crush' on the Mathew Mchonhuey. Inception is one of my Top 5 Films ever.....I felt exhausted and amazed. Interstellar is up there as an experience as well, but of a different kind. So powerful: thought-provoking scientifically but more importantly to me emotionally captivating. Really bought to light my relationship with my daughter. Thanks Nolan.
It’s crazy how he makes it look realistic. Like the movie is grounded for a sci-fi movie. He also does the inter dimensional stuff kinda like a psychedelic trip but still grounded.
I’m late as the Dickens and just watched the film in full last Friday. I knew 2001 would be an inspiration somehow. Interstellar actually took the #1 spot on my list from 2001…. After watching it 3 times once last Friday. Incredible masterpiece.
Finally Finally got to see the tribe I am looking for... Film fraternity is honoured because of you people.... Extremely lucky to be placed in this moment 🙏❤️
21:30 Nolan : when I was a kid like being an astronaut was.. Interviewer : was that your dream as a kid? Nolan : I’m literally answering that question! -_-
galloway is so annoying. he's on a lot of these hollywood reporter roundtables and although his questions are good he's constantly interrupting and talking over people. anyway, i love this movie. huge fan of chris and jessica in particular
What I hated more is that he barely even spoke to Jessica and Anne. I mean Murph is an incredibly powerful character, an atrophysicist who didn't go to space and hated her dad for going, so asking Jessica about that aspect would have been something interesting. Felt a bit sexist tbh, just spoke to the 43-year old men. I mean why bring the ladies at all then?
You are welcome! I really love the film...& actually all Nolan's films. He's a kind of genius of his own! So why not share with you guys, who appreciate his cinematographical creativity?!)
Kyle B. Forrest Gump, Whiplash, Prometheus, Skyfall, 2001 space odyssey, The woman in Black, Blue is the warmest color, Foxcatcher etc., some of the movies from my hard disk.. Why you ask?
To me the film is more about a father and daughter's unique relationship. In sci fi this is just masterpiece, I don't know why Oscar was not considered. Anyway, Good job by Nolan
Agree.When Matthew leaves the farmstead, Murph runs out but too late and he looks under blanket as if she might be there, but knows she isn't, its a heartbreaker.