*INTERSTELLAR* was a VISUAL MASTERPIECE and an EMOTIONAL ROLLERCOASTER!! (Movie Reaction/Commentary)

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  • Опубліковано 25 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 215

  • @ReelTimeYT
    @ReelTimeYT  Місяць тому +10

    FULL WATCHALONG TO THIS MOVIE: www.patreon.com/posts/interstellar-118205913
    EARLY ACCESS MOVIE REACTIONS:
    THIS CHRISTMAS: www.patreon.com/posts/this-christmas-2-117654166
    DONNIE DARKO: www.patreon.com/posts/donnie-darko-145-118128135

  • @Sydney0823
    @Sydney0823 Місяць тому +494

    32:28 I’m just casually sobbing along with Rob and Bryce and then the zoom in on Zuff’s face absolutely took me out 😭😂

  • @stegosnoreus6902
    @stegosnoreus6902 Місяць тому +231

    "Are ghosts just people in black holes?" that's the most Zuff question that could ever Zuff

  • @Mswalden
    @Mswalden Місяць тому +456

    32:26 Despite the very depressing scene, I laughed so loud at the transition from you two to Zuff 😭😂

    • @ny6978
      @ny6978 Місяць тому +27

      Zuff's just built different

    • @fdjgkhfsdkghfskjghdf_
      @fdjgkhfsdkghfskjghdf_ Місяць тому +9

      HAHAH zuff is somewhere else

    • @bura19
      @bura19 Місяць тому +12

      Lol dude lives on another planet.

    • @BrittPopka
      @BrittPopka Місяць тому +3

      Lights are on but no one’s home. Say that with love. Sister always says it to me 😅

  • @pooka4373
    @pooka4373 Місяць тому +150

    “Did it get you 🥹”
    “Yeah man I’m fucking covered 😭”
    LOL exactly what I was going through when I first watched this 😂 you are not alone

  • @sushi_donut
    @sushi_donut Місяць тому +234

    Bryce: 😢
    Rob: 😓
    and Zuff: 🤪
    .
    .
    .
    NEVER CHANGE 😭😭💙💙

    • @volosh67gayo49
      @volosh67gayo49 Місяць тому

      32:28 I laughed so hard with that zoom

  • @sydnibitz
    @sydnibitz Місяць тому +394

    the zoom in on Zuff’s face😭💀 32:28

    • @PianoPrinceOfAnime
      @PianoPrinceOfAnime Місяць тому +4

      😮😮😮😯😯😯😯

    • @theuniquename5288
      @theuniquename5288 Місяць тому +4

      Has me dying 😂💀

    • @gemini36B
      @gemini36B Місяць тому +1

      I choked on my food 😂😂

    • @seasonsadge3701
      @seasonsadge3701 Місяць тому +1

      so emotional, but i couldnt stop laughing with this zooms on the faces :D

    • @priscillas4722
      @priscillas4722 Місяць тому +2

      👁️👄👁️ not a thought behind those eyes! 😂😂

  • @emorymcc
    @emorymcc Місяць тому +362

    I don’t think Bryce has ever asked more questions during a movie 😂

    • @joshuacoldwater
      @joshuacoldwater Місяць тому +5

      😂😂😂

    • @davidcwitkin6729
      @davidcwitkin6729 Місяць тому +33

      It's almost weird hearing Bryce talk that much LOL

    • @tomkapa
      @tomkapa Місяць тому +7

      Honestly that’s why I watch these guys😂 he’s annoying sometimes but it’s just like watching a movie with your bros

    • @UnbiasedRemarks
      @UnbiasedRemarks Місяць тому

      I don’t blame em lol

    • @kaytee6895
      @kaytee6895 28 днів тому +3

      I love him

  • @karmo7369
    @karmo7369 Місяць тому +110

    bryce as an astronaut seeing a wormhole: u gotta be tweakin right now

  • @lurategh
    @lurategh Місяць тому +195

    omfg I literally WHEEZED at the zoom in on Rob & Bryce to Zuff 😭😭

  • @tylerbramhall6596
    @tylerbramhall6596 Місяць тому +126

    Whoever edited this one 😂. That zoom in was masterclass

    • @rosa_stars349
      @rosa_stars349 Місяць тому +2

      LMAOAOAO

    • @yasminemixon9340
      @yasminemixon9340 Місяць тому +14

      This one was a rob edit, lol. You can always tell who edits the videos by who leads the outtros and the intros

  • @cozydayzandnightz
    @cozydayzandnightz Місяць тому +105

    I think Rom's death hit me the hardest. Imagine setting out on a big mission, then being left to your lonesome for 23 years, and just as you begin to lose hope, your colleagues return, only for you to die in a tragic accident a few hours later. It still holds up to being an amazing movie, that's for sure.

  • @avery-r9i
    @avery-r9i Місяць тому +121

    watching you guys cry always makes me cry too😭😭

  • @Goldilocks94
    @Goldilocks94 Місяць тому +79

    “I could use a two year nap”
    Same my guy

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 Місяць тому +24

    Murphy Cooper used sound logic to solve the mystery of her "ghost". She knew that:
    1. Solving gravity was possible and essential to completing the mission (Plan A).
    2. The gravitational phenomena at her house when she was a child were part of the solution.
    3. Someone/something "out there" sent messages to her house. The messages were personally for them.
    4. Her father and Endurance were way out in another galaxy, where "They" were manipulating gravity.
    Who else would be sending her those personal messages via gravity? Who else would be saying "Stay"? The logical candidate is her father.

  • @ddavisgaming
    @ddavisgaming Місяць тому +45

    32:40 love how you guys can cry together watching movies and not feel ashamed of it 😂 I cry every time I watch reactions to this movie.. I don't even need to watch the entire movie to get choked up

    • @yasminemixon9340
      @yasminemixon9340 Місяць тому +8

      It's so nice because I've watched other reaction channels where the guys over compensate by laughing and trying to act like a scene didn't make them emotional. The reel time boys here don't care about that nonsense at all, they'll just let it out. Part of the reason why they're my favorite channel.

    • @sathvamp1
      @sathvamp1 Місяць тому

      Yeah, I have yet to get to that point; I've recently started to really appreciate tearjerker movies, but I still get so anxious at the thought of crying in the presence of of anyone, that even IF a movie has a good chance of "getting me" (which is rare as it is), usually nothing will "happen" unless I'm watching alone lol. Funny story: I already knew that a dozen-years-later re-watch as an adult of "The Land Before Time" has the ability to absolutely destroy me. Then, one day, AFTER I'd had a few glasses of wine (important detail since alcohol is a big releaser of inhibitions), while visiting my mom, she decides to ask me "Hey, want to watch Land Before Time tonight?" I was so relaxed from my drinks I just said "Sure!" and didn't think much else. We watch movies while we eat dinner, so on our way to getting our meal and sitting down, I thought, "I wonder if anything is going to come out of me tonight under these circumstances" :P
      So I'm chewing on my ravioli, all is normal at first, and then *that scene* starts.
      Now, background info: Between our chairs, there was a stack of boxes of sorts that happened to hide our view from one another, IF I leaned forward slightly.
      So especially after assuming that position... there was a flood!
      I don't know much about my mom's experience (whatever it was, I am pretty sure she also gets self conscious about emotions since she never talks about it lol).... but at one point, she must have noticed I was hiding behind the boxes for a while, because I remember she asked me, "What are you doing?"
      Upon which I took another bite of ravioli, and truthfully said, "Chewing!" :P

    • @sathvamp1
      @sathvamp1 Місяць тому

      @@yasminemixon9340 Yeah, I myself have yet to get to that point; I've recently started to really appreciate tearjerker movies, but I still get so anxious at the thought of crying in the presence of of anyone, that even IF a movie has a good chance of "getting me" (which is rare as it is), usually nothing will "happen" unless I'm watching alone lol. Funny story: I already knew that a dozen-years-later re-watch as an adult of "The Land Before Time" has the ability to absolutely destroy me. Then, one day, AFTER I'd had a few glasses of wine (important detail since alcohol is a big releaser of inhibitions), while visiting my mom, she decides to ask me "Hey, want to watch Land Before Time tonight?" I was so relaxed from my drinks I just said "Sure!" and didn't think much else. We watch movies while we eat dinner, so on our way to getting our meal and sitting down, I thought, "I wonder if anything is going to come out of me tonight under these circumstances" :P
      So I'm chewing on my ravioli, all is normal at first, and then *that scene* starts.
      Now, background info: Between our chairs, there was a stack of boxes of sorts that happened to hide our view from one another, IF I leaned forward slightly.
      So especially after assuming that position... there was a flood!
      I don't know much about my mom's experience (whatever it was, I am pretty sure she also gets self conscious about emotions since she never talks about it lol).... but at one point, she must have noticed I was hiding behind the boxes for a while, because I remember she asked me, "What are you doing?"
      Upon which I took another bite of ravioli, and truthfully said, "Chewing!" :P

  • @thewiredtongue
    @thewiredtongue Місяць тому +49

    32:35 Oh my god!! I had to stop the video to write this!!! That close up on Zuff after I was crying along with Rob and Bryce made me BURST OUT LAUGHING!! that was the funniest thing I’ve seen in any of your videos ever!! Nice work guys 😝 Ok, back to the video..

  • @sandrallewellyn2632
    @sandrallewellyn2632 Місяць тому +36

    Fun fact: The Black Hole, Gargantua, was considered the most accurate rendering of a black hole at that time. Even scientists were referencing the data.

  • @MZ-bl6wg
    @MZ-bl6wg Місяць тому +17

    Several fun facts : all of the elderly people in the opening videos talking about the dust except for Murphy are actually real interviews in a documentary about the dust bowls of the 1930’s . Those people are describing what they experienced in the real dust bowl for a Documentary in the 1980’s I believe and Nolan researched these accounts for the movie and decided to put them in. So the water planets unimaginable wave heights are from the gravitational pull of the black hole. Its gravity is so strong it’s pulling a large mass of water upwards on the hapf of planet facing the Blck hole , so the wave is half the diameter of the planet from pole to pole then with the planet rotating causes the direction of wave. One of the astrophysicists Nolan worked with on the concepts said the plannet could have had topography and mountains at one point but that massive wave that circles the planet endlessly is so large it would have wiped out all features grinding everything flat spreading accross the planet which is partially why the water is so shallow , the other reason is like a tsunami , that mega wave bieng pulled towards the black hole has pulled most the planets water into it making everywhere the wave is not, in the swell.

  • @deathwitheponine
    @deathwitheponine Місяць тому +20

    i was lucky enough to see Hans Zimmer live this year. The second to last performance is an Interstellar suite, which just starts out with Hans very softly plucking out the same note over and over again on a piano. In person and every time I have seen footage of this moment, the silence from thousands of people is extraordinarily affecting. This movie is singular, the soundtrack divine. I wish I had been able to see it in IMAX, but there are really very few locations that are true IMAX theaters anymore. Closest I got to seeing this movie in the theater was a few years ago at the local Alamo Drafthouse. I also cry every time I watch this movie.

    • @annah645
      @annah645 Місяць тому

      I was lucky enough to see Hans Zimmer this year too, as well as able to see Interstellar in IMAX a week ago. Got super lucky this year and both experiences were amazing!

  • @emilyyy8870
    @emilyyy8870 Місяць тому +66

    The reason why time was so warped on Miller's planet (the first one) is all to do with Einstein's Theory of Relativity. Basically, the larger the mass, the larger the gravitational pull, the slower the time is on the planet relative to objects further away. Time wouldn't actually feel slower to a person, but as the movie mentioned, you could spend 1 hour on Miller's planet and it equals 7 years on Earth. Miller's planet revolved around a massive Black hole (Gargantiua I think they call it) and so getting closer to Gargantiua is what slows time significantly relative to the objects outside of it's orbit and objects with less mass (less gravitational pull). Bigger mass = slower time, relative to other objects outside of that mass' gravitational pull. Time is relative, not constant! You can actually test this theory with two ultra sensitive clocks. The closer you are within a gravitational field to the mass (so like, in your basement for example) the slower the first clock will go, compared to the second clock, if you take it further away from the mass (to say, a second floor bedroom). They will become un-syncronized, with the basement clock going slower than the 2nd floor clock. This is called gravitational time dilation!! I hope this all makes sense I am so zooted

    • @emilyyy8870
      @emilyyy8870 Місяць тому +13

      ok by "you can test it" i really mean scientists with atomic clocks, i dont think any regular person could find the kind of clocks needed to test Einstein's theory of relativity

    • @blacknoise
      @blacknoise Місяць тому

      @@emilyyy8870you zooted is better than most people on their good days 😂

    • @sen.m7832
      @sen.m7832 Місяць тому +2

      That's crazzyyy thanks for the explanation!

  • @susanreston4861
    @susanreston4861 29 днів тому +4

    the rage against the dying of the light is a quote from a poem 'do not go gentle into that good night' by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas

  • @karmo7369
    @karmo7369 Місяць тому +32

    I WAS ITCHING FOR THIS REACTION OMFG im not even 10 seconds in and im so happy. my fave movie 😭😭 acting, music, storyline all 10/10

  • @FormaAlert
    @FormaAlert Місяць тому +17

    Random thought, Interstellar came out in November of 2014. It's been 10 years since the film premiered, but if it released on Miller's planet at the same time as Earth, they would only be halfway through the film.

  • @subroy7123
    @subroy7123 Місяць тому +28

    17:51 It's a Dylan Thomas poem. The actors for Interstellar did a recitation of the poem that I think you can still find on UA-cam.

    • @eryvne
      @eryvne Місяць тому

      its on spotify too!

  • @seasonsadge3701
    @seasonsadge3701 Місяць тому +20

    32:28 - so emotional, but i couldnt stop laughing with this zooms on the faces :D

  • @BobbyLandiaPDX
    @BobbyLandiaPDX Місяць тому +43

    Regarding cryosleep, the way it works is they take a bunch of pills to put themselves to sleep, then they get into the pod while the pills take effect. Once the chamber fills with two liquids; inside the bag they are sealed in is an oxygenated liquid that they can breathe that replaces any air in their lungs and tissues and works kind of like an antifreeze, preventing their cells and tissues from forming ice crystals. Then the chamber fills with a fluid that is super cold and keeps their body at just above freezing, which slows their metabolism and prevents any tissue damage and basically suspends their organs, including their heart, in a semi-frozen state. When it's time for them to wake up, their bodies are slowly warmed and their bodies are bombarded with low-level electric signals that stimulate electric signals in their brain and heart. As their internal temperature rises, their organs and tissues begin to resume functioning. Brain activity begins to resume and the heart begins to beat again. Once the bag is unsealed and their lungs are exposed to the air, reflexes take over, their lungs expand and the remaining liquid is expelled as consciousness returns. (This is all just how I imagine it working. Cryosleep is still not possible.)

    • @coreyrobinson8209
      @coreyrobinson8209 Місяць тому +4

      It's gonna be a no for me, dawg.

    • @Sofia-cj9ss
      @Sofia-cj9ss Місяць тому +1

      Do they age?

    • @beetlebob4675
      @beetlebob4675 Місяць тому

      ​​​@@Sofia-cj9ss
      It's a good question. If time is relative, 10 years for you is 10 years for you. If you're in a pod for 10 of your own relative years, then yes, you'll be 10 years older.
      But if you're in a pod for 10 EARTH YEARS, and you're either near a black hole OR traveling at warp speed, you may not experience the exact same amount of relative time.
      10 Earth years was roughly an hour and 30 minutes on the water planet in this movie. Relatively. Lol so, on the water planet, you'd have only been in a pod for an hour and a half.
      I'm trying to figure out how many earth years would pass if you spent a decade on that water planet...
      Oh God...
      One hour on the water planet is 7 years on earth. So, 24 hrs in a day, 7 days in a week, 52 weeks in a year...
      🙃

    • @yasminemixon9340
      @yasminemixon9340 Місяць тому

      It's not possible yet

    • @ILJtheFirst
      @ILJtheFirst Місяць тому

      Cool. The next anti-aging fad.

  • @zoe_santos
    @zoe_santos Місяць тому +5

    When I heard only Bryce hadn't seen the movie I IMMEDIATELY went "Oh so Bryce is going to be crying his soul out today, aight" 🤣

  • @JH-jw7pu
    @JH-jw7pu 29 днів тому +3

    Watching Hans Zimmer perform Interstellar live this year was unreal. The vibes in the arena were immaculate! 19,000 people completely still and silent, mesmerised by the performance

  • @bartoluf
    @bartoluf Місяць тому +7

    32:28 OH MY GOD😭😭😭😭😭 whoever edited this is a GENIUS😩😩🙏🙏🙏Zuff i love u sm

  • @xyfghter99
    @xyfghter99 Місяць тому +5

    The big waves are an exreme version of tides on earth. The water is pulled by the gravity of the moon and the planet spinns beneath it. In the case of this planet, instead of the our little moon there is a giant black hole. Hence the big ass waves.

  • @katherinearce1751
    @katherinearce1751 Місяць тому +19

    the boyyysssss‼️can’t wait to cry watching you guys cry

  • @trulyintroverted
    @trulyintroverted Місяць тому +4

    I love watching films with you guys. It's so comforting!

  • @teraaaaaa
    @teraaaaaa Місяць тому +20

    thank you guys for reacting to this❤

  • @spartacusx9349
    @spartacusx9349 Місяць тому +5

    Watching you 2 tear up I was silent. Like I said to myself “yup that shit got me too”’then the camera goes to Zuff and I BUSTED UP and started to laugh my ass off. Made myself tear up 🤣 Jesus Christ even typing this I’m still laughing.

  • @janahall7295
    @janahall7295 Місяць тому +1

    So something a lot of people don't realize about Miller's planet is the black hole's effect; Brand talks about how its proximity to the black hole prevents thing like organic life from happening, because Gargantua sucks up all the things like comets that would otherwise bring microorganisms to the planet. The black hole is also the reason the waves are MASSIVE, it's similar to how the sun and moon create the tides on Earth, but the gravity from the black hole is way greater than the sun's/moon's gravity combined.
    Also in regards to Mann's planet, my own personal head-canon for why he was able to survive after his helmet was cracked: He spent so much time holding his breath during dust storms back on Earth, he was then able to hold his breath to survive the pure ammonia present on Mann's planet.
    This movie continues to be amazing on every watch.

  • @whoroborous
    @whoroborous Місяць тому +4

    'Do not go gentle into that good night' is a poem by Dylan Thomas. (that's where that 'rage, rage against the dying of the light excerpt came from.) He's the tits -- another popular poem of his is 'And death shall have no dominion'.. both have been used in movies before this -- maybe that's what you remember 🤷‍♀️

  • @danielaaa5584
    @danielaaa5584 28 днів тому +1

    I saw this for the first time in IMAX two weeks ago and I don’t think I’ve recovered😭

  • @lydiaking322
    @lydiaking322 26 днів тому +1

    Ugh finally someone who shares my love for Jessica Chastain!! She is amazing.

  • @annabourdieu
    @annabourdieu Місяць тому +1

    What I love about this movie is that you can see how Nolan is so interested/worried about how the future is going to be for his children. People say that his movies are cold and emotionless, but that's far from it.
    His children are even in his movies : one of his sons was in The Dark Knight Rises and his daughter Flora (who inspired Murph) is at the back of one of the trucks here and also in Oppenheimer.

  • @lindsaysmith4208
    @lindsaysmith4208 29 днів тому

    Dude I’m sobbing and then the zoom in on Zuffs face made me choke😂😂😂😂😂 oh man….thank you for that

  • @alvpyrola
    @alvpyrola 12 днів тому

    When you were talking about where they filmed the cold planet, I instantly thought it looked like a place in Iceland. So I looked it up, and I was right! I was there once, as a kid, over thirty years ago. Kind of proud that I recognised it!

  • @kevinmatthew1050
    @kevinmatthew1050 Місяць тому +9

    Saw this in IMAX opening weekend and was one of the best theater experiences of my life.

  • @aster_11
    @aster_11 29 днів тому +2

    Others have already described time dilation, however I'll explain the black hole.
    You actually are correct. Generally with black holes you'd go through a process of "Spaghettification" where you basically get stretched and ripped apart atom by atom. However Gargantua is a supermassive black hole. The gravity is much weaker near the event horizon with supermassive black holes so it is not enough of a difference of gravity on your head and feet to stretch you out. What follows this, we're unsure of... There are theories, such as you could exist in a supermassive black hole until eventually getting crushed by singularity. That's just a theory though.

  • @maiiyachanel
    @maiiyachanel Місяць тому +3

    i swear i’m getting deja vu literally yesterday i was going through yalls channel trying to see if y’all ever made a reaction to this and then i just opened yt to see this on my recommended and i feel like i’ve seen the thumbnail before

  • @11ibi
    @11ibi Місяць тому +1

    This reaction was just as I expected it really tears your heart out so beautifully done loved it man every time I watch it it never disappoints in how it makes me feels

  • @abigailsnail7
    @abigailsnail7 Місяць тому

    Posters behind yall are looking so sick!! So glad you guys are watching this for the channel, I always mention this when speaking about my favorite movies of all time. Sending love from Chicago, happy holidays!! 🩷

  • @Elliieduncan
    @Elliieduncan Місяць тому +23

    I’ve been waiting for this one

  • @sandrallewellyn2632
    @sandrallewellyn2632 Місяць тому +6

    The quote comes from a poem written by Dylan Thomas

  • @loonatic4529
    @loonatic4529 5 днів тому

    The craziest thing is that Nolan worked with physicists and studied A LOT for this movie, in fact, everything is based on real science, they just stretched some things but all based on real data we had up until that point in time. Actually, a crazier fact is, Gargantua was modeled after all the data we had on black holes but at the time this movie came out we didn’t (yet) have a real “photo/image” of a black hole but we got the first one (currently we have two; the second one is from the one we have in the center of our galaxy) a few years later and it matched almost perfectly with how they depicted Gargantua. Also, the fact there’s no sound when the explosion on the endurance happens is because you have the pov from the space and in space there’s no sound. You could scream your lungs out with someone standing right next you you but the wont hear a thing because space is void and you need air or something alike for sound waves to travel. This movie is AMAZING, specially from a science point of view. I’ve always been in love with space and astrophysics so this was…just perfection. Forever my favorite movie!
    Oh, and I forgot to add another fun fact hehe (there’s way too many for this movie), the “tesseract” is just a physical representation of time as a 4th dimension so we can understand and “see” it

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 Місяць тому +2

    During the first writings of the story, Joe Cooper was supposed to die inside the black hole. However, Nolan and his team decided that it would be too sad of an ending for audiences, especially because much of the story was sad.

  • @LylaRose99
    @LylaRose99 20 днів тому +1

    The forced ads during the video message scene was criminal 😭😭

  • @jeongtris77
    @jeongtris77 28 днів тому

    Everytime bryce and rob cry i want to resubscribe all over again 🥺

  • @KalisTech
    @KalisTech Місяць тому

    This movie is one of my all time favorites. The soundtrack alone makes me cry

  • @odorousobject8165
    @odorousobject8165 5 днів тому

    I can answer a few of your questions and clear a few misconceptions about black holes
    The thing you're referring to when it comes to getting squished or stretched apart is called Spaghettification. It's the compactification of spacetime itself as spacetime turns into a funnel approaching the singularity and anything in that funnel gets compressed and stretched until everything is just a thin stream of elementary particles (we think).
    In a rotating massive black hole, like the one we see in the film, you don't actually get squished right away. In tiny black holes the funnel is small and short, so everything get squished quickly. In a supermassive black hole, the funnel is appropriately humongous and so it takes a long time for matter to kind of circle the drain so to speak. Black holes also spin, because most if not all of them are formed from the corpses of dying stars. Stars rotate on their own, and because of the conservation of momentum if you take something ginormous and rotating and shrink it down to 1/1,000,000,000 its size then its rotational energy gets conserved - like when a figure skater brings their arms in and they spin quicker. The rotation of the black hole is unreal fast - they can spin upwards of 85% of the speed of light.
    Black holes do have stable orbital paths for planetary bodies and stars that orbit them. There is a "point of no return" region that once entered a planet will eventually fall into the well of the black hole, but if you stay outside that region you can have a perfectly normal orbit.
    The event horizon of a black hole is a bit of a mirage. You have to flip your understanding of time and space. The event horizon is not a point in space, it's a moment in time from which nothing ever happens in this side of the universe. The singularity follows a similar path, it's the heart of the black hole's future - not a point in space but a moment in time.
    Two things can dilate time relatively to someone else: Acceleration and Gravity. The faster you travel in relation to someone else, the slower time ticks for the faster person. Gravity is similar in that if you're in a much stronger gravity well than say someone here on earth, then time for you passes slower relative to earth. It's why the folks had that 7 years per 1 hour scene - they were closer to the black hole's gravitational well and thus time starts to rapidly accelerate back on earth (relatively). That's how relativity works.
    There's a few more far out theories this movie explores, let's address a few of them. The scene inside the black hole explores the what if scenario of higher dimensional geometry. What if you had access to a single point in space but for all of time? Could you influence that space and if so how so? The movie answered this with gravity and there's some very tiny super teeny evidence that may support this notion, that gravity can extend from one universe into another. It's ultra early and most likely untrue, but good to see it explored on screen. The other thing we see explored is determinism and fate. If future humans created the wormhole to get us to the past, it would alter the future. But if they don't go, then future humans don't exist to create the wormhole. So is there even a choice being made? By whom? Who has free will here?

  • @zekieff
    @zekieff 5 днів тому

    Kinda funny that in the first few minutes of the film you hear that crops are dying off and it's getting harder to grow them, then immediately after that they drive through a field of corn. Also want to say it's very dangerous to drive through a field like that, lost a few buddies in high school who were doing that, they ran right into a harvester.

  • @BrandonWestfall
    @BrandonWestfall Місяць тому +6

    "Did it get you?"
    "Yeah, look at me bro I'm fucking covered."
    lol that scene wrecks most people.

    • @sathvamp1
      @sathvamp1 Місяць тому +1

      For sure! For most of my life, I just never cried during ANY movie (and rarely cried in general)... until I saw "Inside Out"... at age 30!! THAT one was the first movie ever to SO "emotionally sneak-attack me", plus the nuances of that experience actually allowed me to notice the feel-good brain endorphins that often get released along with tears... that it actually turned me into a tearjerker-seeker! But especially given my prior tendencies, I soon realized it was notoriously difficult to find other movies that would also "work on me". But THEN, a few years later... I pretty much accidentally stumbled upon "Interstellar". I knew NOTHING about it; actually had no expectations for it to be emotional, and in fact I was only watching it because it was a REQUIREMENT for a science course, lol. I was very busy during that phase of my life, so I only watched it in chunks while I was eating lunch, to save time. I later regretted not paying FULL attention to my first-time watch (and I love food so I can get quite distracted by my food!), because: During that 23-years of messages scene... during Murph's line of "...and today I'm the same age you were when you left," I suddenly thought, "Why is there liquid running from my eyes down my nose? I don't remember any onions in this salad! OH- it's because this is a sad scene. And DARN I'm half-missing it, since I was apparently concentrating too much on this salad to fully take in the scene!" :P
      I put my food DOWN from then on if I sensed anything important coming up during any future movies, including the rest of that one, and was rewarded during the end scene.

  • @ImJasonD
    @ImJasonD 22 дні тому

    As my favourite movie of all time I have watched quite a few reactions of Interstellar but 32:29 may be my all time favourite reaction to that moment 😂

  • @IBEtripz
    @IBEtripz Місяць тому +7

    I watched this for the first time this year . Phenomenal movie and score has stuck with me

  • @biancanmd
    @biancanmd Місяць тому +1

    17:55 I know which Vic Mensa song you're referring to, Bryce 😆

  • @ceyda2292
    @ceyda2292 Місяць тому +1

    I was also in tears with you guys 😭 really hope we get season 2 of arcane on here!

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 Місяць тому +1

    15:47 "He's not gonna age that quick?"
    There are two ways to experience extreme time dilation:
    1) travelling very close to the speed of light, and 2) being close to a black hole
    A traveler who experiences either situation will age normally from his/her "perspective".
    Years and even decades will pass on Earth while the traveler ages "normally".
    The wormhole didn't create any time dilation for the Endurance.

  • @rosshunter9792
    @rosshunter9792 Місяць тому +1

    That ticking you can hear on Millers planet is relative to the 7 years an hour. Every tick is roughly 1.25 seconds and represents one day back on earth
    EDIT : I typed this out before you mentioned it on the video 😂

  • @priscillas4722
    @priscillas4722 Місяць тому

    I remember this came out during a time when they where making a bunch of movies about space and I was so tired of watching them lol I never saw this one until now so I’m glad u reacted to it 🥰 Mathew is a gem!

  • @CharlesConnell-we4pq
    @CharlesConnell-we4pq Місяць тому +5

    Never get tired of interstellar reactions

  • @shania991
    @shania991 Місяць тому +2

    I remember the first time my boyfriend showed me this I was wondering how I even missed it when I love movies like this but I digress, the way i cried when he is watching the videos from his kids and im not a big crier it takes alot but that scene BROKE me. I have never dislike Anne in a role but her going back for worthless data grinded my damn gears they wasted so much time for NOTHING!

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 Місяць тому +1

    There is no way to predict how anyone would react out in the depths of space, with certain death approaching.
    All the training on Earth cannot adequately prepare anyone for the terrifying unknown.
    Dr. Mann was the leader of the Lazarus astronauts, but his hubris was his undoing. He couldn't handle failure, and he couldn't muster the courage to die honorably, like the other Lazarus astronauts did. The terror of failure, loneliness and death drove him mad, and he hit the "Save Me" switch.
    Once he was revived, he had to keep lying to cover his first lie. He even resorted to murder to get off the planet, and he nearly destroyed the mission and all of Humanity, all because he couldn't handle failure.

  • @sathvamp1
    @sathvamp1 Місяць тому

    My own first watch of this movie really surprised me (and is THE reason I discovered UA-cam movie reactions existed in the first place!).... so much so, that I wanted to see if this movie "got" other people like it had "gotten" me!
    For most of my life, I just never cried during ANY movie (and rarely cried in general)... until I saw "Inside Out"... at age 30!! THAT one was the first movie ever to SO "emotionally sneak-attack me", plus the nuances of that experience actually allowed me to notice the feel-good brain endorphins that often get released along with tears... that it actually turned me into a tearjerker-seeker! But especially given my prior tendencies, I soon realized it was notoriously difficult to find other movies that would also "work on me". But THEN, a few years later... I pretty much accidentally stumbled upon "Interstellar". I knew NOTHING about it; actually had no expectations for it to be emotional, and in fact I was only watching it because it was a REQUIREMENT for a science course, lol. I was very busy during that phase of my life, so I only watched it in chunks while I was eating lunch, to save time. I later regretted not paying FULL attention to my first-time watch (and I love food so I can get quite distracted by my food!), because:
    During that 23-years of messages scene... during Murph's line of "...and today I'm the same age you were when you left," I suddenly thought, "Why is there liquid running from my eyes down my nose? I don't remember any onions in this salad! OH- it's because this is a sad scene. And DARN I'm half-missing it, since I was apparently concentrating too much on this salad to fully take in the scene!" :P
    I put my food DOWN from then on if I sensed anything important coming up during any future movies, including the rest of that one, and was rewarded during the end scene.

  • @stina1656
    @stina1656 Місяць тому +1

    Yaaaay I've been wanting ya'll to react to this movie!!!

  • @TheLoonyLovebad1
    @TheLoonyLovebad1 22 дні тому

    The ice planet was filmed at Svinafellsjokull in Iceland! I’ve gone to iceland a couple times but haven’t been able to make it over there yet. This is my favorite movie so I’m def trying to go at some point

  • @KhrlIRD45
    @KhrlIRD45 Місяць тому +1

    32:14 Jessie is his son??😂 Lol

  • @laciechatoor4937
    @laciechatoor4937 Місяць тому

    first 27 dresses now this???? you just knocked off my top two movies happy birthday to me

  • @siamese..
    @siamese.. Місяць тому

    Zuff built different 🤣

  • @brettcloud8550
    @brettcloud8550 Місяць тому

    One of my top 5 films. There would be a lot of internal debate over the other 4, but this would be in without question.

  • @keepwishin99
    @keepwishin99 Місяць тому

    Zuffs movie watching face will get me everytime

  • @nknae3115
    @nknae3115 Місяць тому +2

    This is an instant click for me!

  • @LeandroOliveiraBatista
    @LeandroOliveiraBatista Місяць тому +1

    Some scenes are filmed in Iceland! Crazy, right?

  • @crossthestars
    @crossthestars Місяць тому

    I clicked on this video IMMEDIATELY when I saw you were reacting to my favorite movie. Let's go!

  • @briceoka5623
    @briceoka5623 Місяць тому +1

    Scariest thing about miller is the wave is actually stationary, they're just rotated into it

    • @Stogie2112
      @Stogie2112 Місяць тому +1

      The waves were not stationary. They were moving very rapidly. Miller's planet experienced massive tidal forces, caused by the massive gravity of Gargantua. The constant pulling on the planet's oceans created the waves.

  • @emmasaulters3611
    @emmasaulters3611 Місяць тому +6

    Even though I don’t understand half of this movie it’s still amazing every time I see it! Great reaction 😁

  • @ladyweird12
    @ladyweird12 Місяць тому

    This is one of the best movies every created. Oh my.

  • @jackpattinson5983
    @jackpattinson5983 Місяць тому

    22:23 Einstein’s relativity shows that time slows down near strong gravity or at high speeds, and space bends around massive objects. It’s the foundation for GPS accuracy and our understanding of black holes and the universe.
    Basically, time is relative, and it is not the same everywhere. Netwon's laws were just the exceptions. Also, 57:00 is the perfect representation of the akashic records.

  • @cocobella1999
    @cocobella1999 Місяць тому

    I’ve BEEN waiting for this one 🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @RobertHogg-u8w
    @RobertHogg-u8w Місяць тому

    18.00 Rage Rage ,don’t go gently into the night . it’s a poem by Dylan Thomas

  • @celem12
    @celem12 Місяць тому

    Trust me, give it a couple weeks and watch it back again...the second time I watched this movie completely broke me.

  • @RaymoDetroit
    @RaymoDetroit Місяць тому +2

    My favorite thing in the movie is the idea that love is a law just like gravity. It’s their love for each other that allowed them to connect in the 5th dimension tesseract and save humanity.

  • @alexandracole3926
    @alexandracole3926 29 днів тому

    We all just crying together 😅

  • @daniellebelisle2446
    @daniellebelisle2446 Місяць тому

    Every time elder Murph (Ellen Burstyn) says “because my dad promised me” I WEEP! 😭😭😭🥹🥹🥹

  • @gregorygant4242
    @gregorygant4242 Місяць тому

    A great movie, a masterpiece .
    That score from Hans Zimmer is amazing that Pipe organ music sounds stunning !
    I think it was from a church somewhere , not sure but I think it was.

  • @deadeyes4626
    @deadeyes4626 Місяць тому

    18:00 it’s a Welsh quote btw🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @TurnOntheBrightLights.
    @TurnOntheBrightLights. 26 днів тому

    Don't lemme leave Muuurrrppphhh 😭😭

  • @nicolasfernandez3731
    @nicolasfernandez3731 Місяць тому

    thanks for no overreact. A lot of reactors that have already seen it overreact A LOT, even though they say they've seen it

  • @patmcconnell9956
    @patmcconnell9956 Місяць тому +1

    This movie is the only one propaganda that can get me behind AI and that is in the beauty of TARS and CASE

  • @bel-is6gz
    @bel-is6gz Місяць тому +2

    i love this move! i’m so happy you guys reacted to it 😍

  • @agirlhasnoname567
    @agirlhasnoname567 Місяць тому +2

    I think this is actually one of my favorite movies EVER. I’m so psyched to see you guys are watching this together 👏🏽

  • @lunaloutfy
    @lunaloutfy Місяць тому

    One of the greatest films of all time!!!

  • @maeglinnoldor6393
    @maeglinnoldor6393 Місяць тому

    SPLIT, chicos, no se arrepentirán.

  • @dulcegarcia6254
    @dulcegarcia6254 Місяць тому

    one of my fav movies ever thank u sm for watching it pls do more nolan

  • @annabanana4542
    @annabanana4542 Місяць тому

    THE ZOOM TO ZUFF😭😭😭😭

  • @BlockofGrass
    @BlockofGrass Місяць тому

    I was surprised you guys hadn't done this movie yet