Something similar "putting something inconceivable on screen" has been done by the space sci-fi show:- _The Expanse_ It truly is the TV show analogue of Interstellar. Its sad not too many people are aware about it. Its the greatest Sci-fi show in history. And not only because of the sci-fi part. Every single thing about this show is VERY well crafted. Both the author of the novel its based on and the show runners know their stuff.
@@death_paradeMy friend has read the books and has recommended it to me, if you are telling me it's the greatest sci fi show ever... I'm gonna have you have a look
@@death_parade Wow, tbh I've grown to really like slow burners, it gives us time to learn about the characters and the world this show has introduced, if it's anything like interstellar I'll be very impressed, it's not just the visuals in interstellar the gets me worked up, it's the characters and how they really deal with these unimaginable problems, if the expanse can reel me in to it's own world I'll happily watch it all
@@3y35poihjpn I think what gets me emotionally attached and relatable is the father/daughter relationship and how he has to leave her! Gets me every time and keeps ahold of me throughout no matter how many times I've seen it! Absolutely love this film!
oof.- U right, I don’t fear death. Lol. The unknowns have always fascinated me. As human beings we possess true self-awareness, or metacognition. Aware of being aware. I know that I know. *But I know that I do NOT know too.* From my perspective, that is _formidable_ power. Transform the existential crisis into limitless curiosity. Theoretically, expanding your awareness, like the universe itself. And infinity-nothingness are highly abstract ideas from the human mind. We at least have a partial grasp. Just not completely. Still figuring out
oof.- For me, it is subjectively objective. If that makes sense to you. Like I’ve said before, within our metacognition. I’m aware of things outside of myself, and everything unknown to myself. Think about everything you do know, misremembered, and do not know. Yet one unfettered capacity remains. The awareness of being aware; even our thoughts can be used as tools. Which is how the concepts of philosophy, mythology, and free-will emerged for human beings. We try to craft purpose, or meaning within our existence. Which I believe is *NOT* futile. From my perspective, it has serious degrees of substance. The biosphere of earth is so diverse, and lively. Genetics has a purpose for every species. Otherwise, a species/organism wouldn’t be a thing within biology. Unicellular to Multicellular. The grand scheme of things is too intricate to be meaningless. I’m not religious. But I do believe there is a hereafter. I’ll describe myself as having a scientific mind, and a spiritual heart. Just research, or UA-cam NDE experiences from people.
A few months ago bought OLED TV for deep black colors. First thing I wanted to see from TV was this very same wormhole scene. Was not disappointed ,goosebumps 100%
@@codymichels5360 Not sure why. OLED and Plasma tvs are the only TV's available to the consumer public that have infinite contrast ratio. A movie like Interstellar really shows this well because there is no light bleed that exist in regular LCD/LED tvs. Usually the major complaint of Plasmas is the lack of brightness which was very evident in brightly lit showrooms.
Except it would take 10 billion years for you to reach there, as nothing can travel faster than light. It may feel like only a few seconds, but billions of years have passed in real life. To be fair, these wormholes are made by super intelligent humans, so I think they have a work around.
Crazy that the hand she was touching actually later turned out to be coopers when he entered another dimension and was experiencing time and space differently
@@heavenleebiersack6743 When I saw Cooper later on reaching out to touch Brand, I WISHED I hadn't known that. Something about how space and time reacted scared the crap out of me. It still makes me shiver when I see it.
Think about it this way, gravity (and love) are able to transcend the 4 known dimensions (x, y, z, time). The "ghost blur" that Brand sees is the "gravitational silhouette" of Cooper as he moves through time when the tessaract dissolves. Since the tessaract is 4/5 dimensional space, when Cooper physically moves in x, y, or z he is essentially "moving through time" instead of "moving through space" like we normally do. I think since the Black Hole and Worm Hole have such high gravitational forces, the theory is that Cooper traveled from the Black Hole singularity (point of entry into the 4/5 dimension) to the Worm hole (point of exit out of 4/5 dimension) like we saw in the Paper metaphor when it gets folded and the pen punched through it, where the "paper" is the 4/5th dimension's Gravity/Time "fabric" instead of our normal space/time fabric. So, when the Tessaract (the linking "space" here, or "pen" in the example) deconstructed he was spit out the wormhole near Jupiter. Like Murph's bedroom, for a brief moment Cooper's physical body exists as a "Gravitational Silhouette" at "all points in time" at that wormhole's location. Therefore when the "original team" is traveling forwards through the wormhole Cooper intersects them briefly as he travels backwards out the worm hole, separated by a higher dimension but connected via Gravity.
Actually no. Their individual lander pods were all docked to a single spacecraft, the Lazaurus. So they were all together during this part. When they got out of the wormhole, they all split through their respective landers.
this is one of those movies where i just have to stop and think, and rewatch scenes because they’re so incredible. who knows what’s in the universe out there, this is probably a real thing. it’s too incomprehensible for our minds
@@isiahduran2041 Maybe but remember Murphy’s law. In an infinite universe anything that can happen will happen, and also already has. Plus the amount of time distortion and the fabric of space literally having a hole in it, it’s very possible that people or a sturdy craft could survive. Also it’s very possible they would get spaghettified as well. We will never know.
@@dustybawls3561 Only one way to find out is to try. But probably won’t happen anytime in our lifetime sadly, so good lick to all those future spacemen
When I was really young I'd watch the documentaries about black holes on Discovery channel and fell in love. You'd think I would have ended up majoring in physics but nah
I remember this being one of the best theater experiences I’ve ever had, if not *the* single best. I saw Interstellar at the movies back when I was like 13 and it literally blew my mind. This entire scene is like taking the exit onto a vast cosmic highway.
@@ScootyPuffJrSux same here. I was roughly 9-10 when it came out and I probably would've thought it's super boring. I saw it for the first time a few months ago though and I had nothing to say except "wow." Absolutely incredible
Christopher Nolan's SFX team for this film essentially created new rendering technology to create these very scenes - digital SFX suites at the time had never rendered the bending of space in this way. It's especially noticeable in the black hole scene (near the end of the movie) - Nolan's team had to build/program a new CGI model, and that is an even greater feat when you consider that no one had ever accurately visualized the warping of spacetime prior to this film. If I remember correctly, several physicists (both practical and theoretical) who saw the film concluded that Nolan's team hadn't just created new CGI technology, but *accurate* CGI technology - all of the physical variables involved with a black hole are accounted for (mostly), making the scenes as close to what we'd actually see as you can get.
@@chrisb3976It’s easy to forget when you’re drowning in daily life, getting so worked up on the little things you forget to focus on the bigger picture.
Judah Salinas it’s actually theoretically inaccurate. It wouldn’t be dramatic at all. You would just literally appear at your destination. Kip Thorne himself said so
@@kayyyp4939 Kip Thorne says in his book about the science of this film that the team "went for an abstract representation of the wormhole, informed by my equations" (or something like that). So perhaps it's not entirely innacurate. Perhaps they complexified the geometry of the wormhole's throat to get those shots of varying curvature like at 2:51...
The fact that I am sitting in my home, doing my 9 to 5 Job, continuing on with my life like this, and not aware about the mysteries of Space. Makes me sad and insignificant. 😭😭😭😭😭😭
yeah but you literally are the universe, just as much as this planet, this galaxy. everything is one brother, as above so below, as the universe so the soul🤙
All of us humans have bodies made of debris scattered by exploding stars far away from Earth, and sometime in the distant future, after we burn up together with Earth, we will travel through space, and return to the debris.
It's BARELY less spooky at home if you have a 7 ft wide screen and Blu Ray projector with a decent sound system. Watching it in total darkness is frightening.
I saw it in IMAX twice too. Would definitely pay to see it again if they re-released it. Green screening/photoshopping all the Avengers together doesn't come close to the visual and special effects in this movie.
1:59-2:06 The visuals & the background music.... Overwhelming, intriguing, engaging, scary yet oddly beautiful... Watched this part many times over, cant get enough...
My first imax 15/70 experience was this movie. Nothing comes close to this scene in any media. When they exit the wormhole at 3:38.... unforgettable on a 60x80ft screen.
exactly how i felt watching this scene man, i literally started to inhale as deep as i could and holding my breath as if i was in the spaceship with them.masterpiece of a movie
I watched this last night in 4k on my 70" as I was at the peak of a 5g mushroom trip, with good headphones and a subpac on (basically a subwoofer you wear like a backpack that transfers bass directly in to your spine, your eyeballs shake and your teeth chatter). It literally felt like I was with the crew, going through the wormhole myself, space dust and warped space-time were leaking out of the screen and in the room with me. Truly one of the most mesmerizing and meaningful moments of my life, anyone who's reading this, please do it at least once before you die!
@@euan6959 Honestly, there was a solid month where almost every trip I would watch at least a couple scenes from this lol, had to stop because I was going to know every line by heart and wanted to still be able to enjoy it
@@euan6959 Haha oh if you think that's intense I did 8 grams of penis envy (around 2x stronger than common strains) the other night, via pineapple juice extraction so it kicks in 2-3x faster and more intensely AND if you take 4-10 drops of lemon oil beforehand, it blocks certain receptors in your digestive system that absorb psilocybin (ones that are apparently responsible for nausea, although I haven't noticed a big improvement in nausea yet) but a side effect of this is that because these extra receptors are blocked beforehand, the only place your psilocybin has to go is your main serotonin receptors so doing that seems to increase the intensity of the whole trip by another 40%-70%, THAT was intense. If you have previous anxiety issues like me, look in to propranolol, it blocks your adrenaline system for a few hours and makes it almost impossible to have a panic attack, it's the only reason I was able to start using mushrooms to treat my mental issues and it saved my life.
Interstellar is the most unique experience I’ve ever had in the cinema. This scene had my jaw on the floor. It was fascinating just as it was terrifying. Just like the crew of the Endurance, you had no idea what was gonna happen when they went into the wormhole. It felt like you were also on this journey into the unknown darkness of space. You can that’s exactly what Nolan was going for, to take the audience on an adventure.
This movie was a service. Didn't do the greatest. But that is because it went over a lot of people's heads. Those of us that understand relativity were overjoyed by this film. Thank you Mr Nolan
I love how grounded in reality it looks It doesn't have fancy ultra Super things on it Like in star gate or star trek or whatever You just see the other side warped from the gravity
You read something like Xeelee or whatever where there’s wormholes, or either it’s this bright and epic thing like stargaze but I love how here it’s just the literal bending of space and time. So beautiful and convays how long the journey is.
Genuinely. ... i got completely fascinated after seeing this movie. My vision towards universe has been changed completely ... feels like I'm getting more educated. Awesome movie and I never get tired watching this movie.
@Mihai Achim A theory on how these navy UFO craft function...it works abit like a black hole...not my theory people alot smarter than me lol...but look up how a zero point warp drive works..it's a theory but a good one in my opinion. A zero point warp drive could in theory have infinite energy....and there tech if it can manipulate the fabric of space could fold space time just like folding a piece of paper from point to point with a dot draw on ethier end. Also i believe that why these craft move so fluidly and without making a sonic boom is because the craft itself isn't moving but the fabric of space around it....it bends space time...and as far as I'm aware the fabric of space has no mass so the craft would act like it's free from inertia or the restraints of using combustion fuels like we do. If you watch the navy UFO video one looks like it has some kind of aura around it...that's it bending space time around the craft itself..there understanding of how gravity actually works is far ahead of what we know.
Doina M. If you think about the context and what it implies going inside it as well as how small they look against this massive space time distortion then it can be a bit creepy in that sense.
If you look the moment brand and the anomaly stop holding hands and the camera pans right 3:36 , you can see the anomaly take off to the side very fast! I never noticed that until I played it back at .25 speed!
For any nerds out there, coopers contact with brand from hyperspace caused a halt in the singularity of a wormhole. In reality without a disturbance, they would’ve passed right through without any time being passed.
As a space enthusiast, the explanation for a spherical wormhole and the events which follow are, taken together, one of the most fascinating things mankind has ever seen.
To think that these things are theoretically possible under the laws of physics is mind boggling to me…it really isn’t that crazy though when you think about the existence of black holes and how mysterious they are…it isn’t a stretch at all to think these things exist out there.
I was 17 when I saw this in the cinema, and at the time, I had never in my life seen anything like it. I'd seen wormholes depicted in sci-fi all the time but they never seemed accurate to real life. Something about this felt so real and visceral, as if the very laws of physics I was familiar with, were being warped right before my eyes. It was astonishing and terrifying.
2:47 I love that visual representation of space and time morphing into unfathomable shapes and forms as they travel through a higher dimension. Just awesome.
@@luckyizzac Dude, stop taking things as completely literal. Obviously no one would know what it actually looks like lol that's why I said "representation"
@@barnacleboi2595 there are accurate simulations that can render a wormhole almost perfectly just like how they rendered the blackhole on their own render engine, if they did a little more work they couldve made one for a wormhole too. Watch the video by scott manley on wormholes. Accurate wormholes look a lot less cooler than interstellar wormhole, and I can see thats why interstellar made wormholes like that, which is why I think interstellar wormhole's vfx looks amazing, but not accurate
If there are any other scenes in 4k HDR that you would like to see, leave a comment down below
AMAZING!!!!
Gargantuas black hole scene in interstellar
The scene in the sea
Docking scene
Haha. The whole movie.
Genuinely one of the greatest sci-fi movies ever made.
Top 20 for sure
@@b_f_d_d Top 1
I think the Martian was one of my favorite ones.
@@christophergerber2949 the martian is also one of my favourites, most things by Ridley Scott to be fair.
Is it weird. That Matt Damon. Who is the main character of the Martian. Plays Dr mann in this movie!
The fact that they put something that is inconceivable on screen just makes this a true masterpiece
Something similar "putting something inconceivable on screen" has been done by the space sci-fi show:-
_The Expanse_
It truly is the TV show analogue of Interstellar. Its sad not too many people are aware about it. Its the greatest Sci-fi show in history. And not only because of the sci-fi part. Every single thing about this show is VERY well crafted. Both the author of the novel its based on and the show runners know their stuff.
@@death_paradeMy friend has read the books and has recommended it to me, if you are telling me it's the greatest sci fi show ever... I'm gonna have you have a look
@@3y35poihjpn Great! You wouldn't regret it. I will also read the books once I complete my Post graduation next year.
@@death_parade Wow, tbh I've grown to really like slow burners, it gives us time to learn about the characters and the world this show has introduced, if it's anything like interstellar I'll be very impressed, it's not just the visuals in interstellar the gets me worked up, it's the characters and how they really deal with these unimaginable problems, if the expanse can reel me in to it's own world I'll happily watch it all
@@3y35poihjpn I think what gets me emotionally attached and relatable is the father/daughter relationship and how he has to leave her! Gets me every time and keeps ahold of me throughout no matter how many times I've seen it! Absolutely love this film!
Such a thing of beauty and existential dread combined into one single thing.
I’ve never understood why people felt an existential crisis from outer space. It always feel me with awe, and intellectual curiosity.
oof.- U right, I don’t fear death. Lol. The unknowns have always fascinated me. As human beings we possess true self-awareness, or metacognition. Aware of being aware. I know that I know. *But I know that I do NOT know too.* From my perspective, that is _formidable_ power. Transform the existential crisis into limitless curiosity. Theoretically, expanding your awareness, like the universe itself.
And infinity-nothingness are highly abstract ideas from the human mind. We at least have a partial grasp. Just not completely. Still figuring out
oof.- For me, it is subjectively objective. If that makes sense to you. Like I’ve said before, within our metacognition. I’m aware of things outside of myself, and everything unknown to myself. Think about everything you do know, misremembered, and do not know. Yet one unfettered capacity remains. The awareness of being aware; even our thoughts can be used as tools. Which is how the concepts of philosophy, mythology, and free-will emerged for human beings. We try to craft purpose, or meaning within our existence. Which I believe is *NOT* futile. From my perspective, it has serious degrees of substance.
The biosphere of earth is so diverse, and lively. Genetics has a purpose for every species. Otherwise, a species/organism wouldn’t be a thing within biology. Unicellular to Multicellular. The grand scheme of things is too intricate to be meaningless.
I’m not religious. But I do believe there is a hereafter. I’ll describe myself as having a scientific mind, and a spiritual heart. Just research, or UA-cam NDE experiences from people.
@@ViperBitten we experience the nothing twice
Before we're born, and after our death.
Perfectly Put.
A few months ago bought OLED TV for deep black colors. First thing I wanted to see from TV was this very same wormhole scene. Was not disappointed ,goosebumps 100%
#1 reason i still haven't given up my plasma
Albert Leao not sure what you mean. i have a plasma and the colors are horrid
@@codymichels5360 Not sure why. OLED and Plasma tvs are the only TV's available to the consumer public that have infinite contrast ratio. A movie like Interstellar really shows this well because there is no light bleed that exist in regular LCD/LED tvs.
Usually the major complaint of Plasmas is the lack of brightness which was very evident in brightly lit showrooms.
mimim doubt that
@@mimimimeow nice joke.
This movie imo is a 10/10, there’s really nothing more eye opening than a movie about space travel to save humanity.
How about a TV series like this? Watch _The Expanse_ . Its a hard sci-fi, like Interstellar and unlike Star Trek Star Wars BS.
@@death_parade i recently saw that show like a month ago. Easily the greatest space sci fi ive seen.
yup. The scope of this film is absolutely gigantic! One of the best movies I've ever watched! Amazing and thoughtful and beautiful.
@@death_parade I just finished watching that show. I agree with Jedilord, it is the greatest tv sci fi i've seen.
Thousandth like ✋
Jeez. To think that the wormhole probably saved MILLIONS of years of travel time is amazing.
The wormhole fr came in clutch tho.
@@CrazyCrafter181gaming lol
Except it would take 10 billion years for you to reach there, as nothing can travel faster than light. It may feel like only a few seconds, but billions of years have passed in real life. To be fair, these wormholes are made by super intelligent humans, so I think they have a work around.
The Wormhole was the real MVP. I really wish an actual wormhole would appear right now in our solar system.
It would be cool if one day we could create artificial wormholes to travel colonize or communicate with other parts of the milky way
Crazy that the hand she was touching actually later turned out to be coopers when he entered another dimension and was experiencing time and space differently
Wow I just realized that too! Thanks for pointing that out
terrified me at first and i still dont like it even after knowing it was cooper lol
@@heavenleebiersack6743 When I saw Cooper later on reaching out to touch Brand, I WISHED I hadn't known that. Something about how space and time reacted scared the crap out of me. It still makes me shiver when I see it.
Think about it this way, gravity (and love) are able to transcend the 4 known dimensions (x, y, z, time). The "ghost blur" that Brand sees is the "gravitational silhouette" of Cooper as he moves through time when the tessaract dissolves. Since the tessaract is 4/5 dimensional space, when Cooper physically moves in x, y, or z he is essentially "moving through time" instead of "moving through space" like we normally do.
I think since the Black Hole and Worm Hole have such high gravitational forces, the theory is that Cooper traveled from the Black Hole singularity (point of entry into the 4/5 dimension) to the Worm hole (point of exit out of 4/5 dimension) like we saw in the Paper metaphor when it gets folded and the pen punched through it, where the "paper" is the 4/5th dimension's Gravity/Time "fabric" instead of our normal space/time fabric.
So, when the Tessaract (the linking "space" here, or "pen" in the example) deconstructed he was spit out the wormhole near Jupiter. Like Murph's bedroom, for a brief moment Cooper's physical body exists as a "Gravitational Silhouette" at "all points in time" at that wormhole's location. Therefore when the "original team" is traveling forwards through the wormhole Cooper intersects them briefly as he travels backwards out the worm hole, separated by a higher dimension but connected via Gravity.
“Insert the line Amelia said”
The sound after they arrived at the other galaxy is incredible. It gives you the spontaneous feeling of loneliness, so far, far from home.
Perfectly said
You read my mind, so accurate 🎉
The wormhole looks soo beautiful...wow.
@Kartikeya Rathore nani?
Say it don't spray it Nahilda...
The other astronauts went thru it ALONE...
Movie about Lazarus missions would be interesting in itself.
@@mihirghate7390 yessss!
ikr.. great though realization!
Actually no. Their individual lander pods were all docked to a single spacecraft, the Lazaurus. So they were all together during this part. When they got out of the wormhole, they all split through their respective landers.
@@s.d.3656 The other comment a movie just about the lazarus mission would still be awesome tho.
"It's space beyond our three dimensions.
All you can do is record and observe".
Just imagining going through a wormhole in a spaceship that's rattling and shaking like that freaks me out so much, great scene
And then arriving with this guy saying 'we're here' with no way to turn back freaked me out the most;-)
not to be the nerd but going through a wormhole theoretically would require negative mass so i guess these guys were superheroes with special powers
@@Polarzz🤓
@@Polarzzyou got proof? been in a wormhole? worked the math out yourself? stop talking bullshit
My nerves would definitely be unsettled. The hull rattling, absolute uncertainty and knowing you can't do anything during the ride.
this is one of those movies where i just have to stop and think, and rewatch scenes because they’re so incredible. who knows what’s in the universe out there, this is probably a real thing. it’s too incomprehensible for our minds
Well in reality I think that wormhole would shred any man made object due to the sheer pressure of its gravity.
@@isiahduran2041 Maybe but remember Murphy’s law. In an infinite universe anything that can happen will happen, and also already has. Plus the amount of time distortion and the fabric of space literally having a hole in it, it’s very possible that people or a sturdy craft could survive. Also it’s very possible they would get spaghettified as well. We will never know.
@@dustybawls3561 Only one way to find out is to try. But probably won’t happen anytime in our lifetime sadly, so good lick to all those future spacemen
@@tong6644lmao good lick
this movie really got me interested in space. Before this, I didn't care one bit
For me it was valerian then I was itching for more space movies so I watched this one and the martian
When I was really young I'd watch the documentaries about black holes on Discovery channel and fell in love. You'd think I would have ended up majoring in physics but nah
@@TheReck12 Yep. Same here.
Exactly
same man
oh i regret not seeing this in cinemas
Me too, i regret that i only went to cinemas once a year. I should have gone more often
I feel bad, I was 12 when I saw that movie in theaters, truly amazing
It was amazing man. If I could go back in time to November 2014 to see it again for the first time I would.
I saw it in IMAX Hyderabad not knowing anything about director or its epicness for many years lol
it was quite a trip
All this stuff makes me sad we'll never reach any level of marked exploration of space in my lifetime
You haven't been keeping track of SpaceX' progress and plans for the near future, have you?
@@MentalParadox They're dreaming
@@3y35poihjpn They're achieving*
@@MentalParadox They're achieving in their dreams
@@3y35poihjpn Ah, now I get it. Sorry for the confusion.
I remember this being one of the best theater experiences I’ve ever had, if not *the* single best. I saw Interstellar at the movies back when I was like 13 and it literally blew my mind. This entire scene is like taking the exit onto a vast cosmic highway.
i’m hella jealous u got to experience this in the theatre, i wish i could’ve seen this when it came out
@@8johh oh yeah, it was nuts. I think I would’ve seen it in 3D as well.
I was 10 when I watched it and I had no fucking clue what was going on
@@ScootyPuffJrSux same here. I was roughly 9-10 when it came out and I probably would've thought it's super boring. I saw it for the first time a few months ago though and I had nothing to say except "wow." Absolutely incredible
i was 14 and it's all I thought about for a week after exiting the theater, generational movie
I watched this movie while high and the scene blew my mind…. They way space “bent”, the sounds and the graphics…. I had goosebumps
Christopher Nolan's SFX team for this film essentially created new rendering technology to create these very scenes - digital SFX suites at the time had never rendered the bending of space in this way.
It's especially noticeable in the black hole scene (near the end of the movie) - Nolan's team had to build/program a new CGI model, and that is an even greater feat when you consider that no one had ever accurately visualized the warping of spacetime prior to this film. If I remember correctly, several physicists (both practical and theoretical) who saw the film concluded that Nolan's team hadn't just created new CGI technology, but *accurate* CGI technology - all of the physical variables involved with a black hole are accounted for (mostly), making the scenes as close to what we'd actually see as you can get.
One of my favorite scenes in Cinema. This movie always makes me feel some type of way . Humans on a rock, floating in space. What else is out there ?
Not floating. being flung continuously around the sun with only gravity to hold it in the orbit.
God
vignesh kr no-need to get philosophical, just a saying
This film is very thought-provoking. It makes you put everything into perspective, and your place within it all.
The Supreme Creator of all. God Almighty.
This scene is unbelievably powerful and mesmerizing. It makes you feel so small amongst the vastness of time and space.
I hope you knew that before a movie showed you.
@@chrisb3976It’s easy to forget when you’re drowning in daily life, getting so worked up on the little things you forget to focus on the bigger picture.
2:48 this is so well animated combined with the eery sound - i can really feel the space bending
I would totally risk my life to go through a worm hole to see if other plants were habitable for us
And leave family and friends?
Plants?
Oops I meant planets. Yes to leave family and friends
@@Wolfie_2045 Imagine living in a giant, floating plant in space lol
I'd go to see if those plants are edible. Haha
*UA-cam in 22020*
How To Build A Wormhole In 5 Minutes
[DIY] How to make a work hole in your home.
@@batman_2004 The Gays: How to Make a Wormhole in Your Hole in Five Easy Steps
*Negative Mass intensifies*
You must be a very funny guy, just like the 10k other who wrote this.
You must be a funny guy.
Like the 1 other guys who wrote this
This film has one of the best directing ever and every scene - especially the ones set in the space - is simply pure poetry
The movie did an awesome job at displaying what going through a worm hole looks like, even if it is just a guess🤙
Judah Salinas it’s actually theoretically inaccurate. It wouldn’t be dramatic at all. You would just literally appear at your destination. Kip Thorne himself said so
@@kayyyp4939 perhaps. It still looked hella cool tho
@Colin Hubble ya same here but it’s cool cause black holes is time travel (kinda)
@@kayyyp4939 Kip Thorne says in his book about the science of this film that the team "went for an abstract representation of the wormhole, informed by my equations" (or something like that). So perhaps it's not entirely innacurate. Perhaps they complexified the geometry of the wormhole's throat to get those shots of varying curvature like at 2:51...
ua-cam.com/video/D4yoj4xdNN0/v-deo.html
The fact that I am sitting in my home, doing my 9 to 5 Job, continuing on with my life like this, and not aware about the mysteries of Space. Makes me sad and insignificant. 😭😭😭😭😭😭
yeah but you literally are the universe, just as much as this planet, this galaxy. everything is one brother, as above so below, as the universe so the soul🤙
Go get job in the space industry. Go college and get a degree and become an astronaut. Don’t sit around and do nothing about it.
You are a Robot of Your Company
@tubewatch59 no mate
All of us humans have bodies made of debris scattered by exploding stars far away from Earth, and sometime in the distant future, after we burn up together with Earth, we will travel through space, and return to the debris.
This movie literally changed my life. Nobody can watch this and not feel different
This movie legit had some of the best special effects I've ever seen
2:10 to 2:35 - The organ soundtrack combined with out of this world visuals is ominously magnificent.
I just LOVE the use of the organ in this entire soundtrack. So haunting, so beautiful!
Beautiful & scary at the same time.
Seeing this in the cinema was the most spectacular thing I've ever witnessed - I could barely breathe for this five minute section.
The cut at 3:35 and the sound effect that goes a long with it is such an effective way of portaying the crew's sudden arrival lightyears away.
That must be one of the most beautiful scene in cinema history, you can't be anything but in awe.
3:37 when I saw this at the theater, I almost fell forward, it was so awesome
The silence and the atmosphere, it's chilling.
No you didn't
@@AlexBigShidright 😂
I remember seeing this scene for the first time in IMAX... i was scared as hell!
The graphics and sound design team really did an amazing job with this movie!
They really did! This is one of the best movies i've seen in a long time.
God I wish I watched this in cinemas, big regret of mine
@@adnauseam721 That's why they got an Oscar.
It's BARELY less spooky at home if you have a 7 ft wide screen and Blu Ray projector with a decent sound system. Watching it in total darkness is frightening.
UA-cam compressed the hell out of this scene
I will never forget seeing this in IMAX
Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. This movie is a piece of art seen in 4k is a beauty
One of the coolest cinematic scenes I've ever seen. Absolutely stunning and mindboggling!!
I saw Interstellar at an IMAX theater twice. I still have the promotional posters. It has to be in my top 5 theatrical experiences of all time.
You're lucky.... There wasn't a single imax near mine atleast for some 500 miles.
I saw it in IMAX twice too. Would definitely pay to see it again if they re-released it.
Green screening/photoshopping all the Avengers together doesn't come close to the visual and special effects in this movie.
1:59-2:06 The visuals & the background music.... Overwhelming, intriguing, engaging, scary yet oddly beautiful... Watched this part many times over, cant get enough...
My first imax 15/70 experience was this movie. Nothing comes close to this scene in any media. When they exit the wormhole at 3:38.... unforgettable on a 60x80ft screen.
Try VR
Watched the movie in IMAX yesterday. During the wormhole scene it felt like I was actually traveling through it. Absolutely breathtaking.
exactly how i felt watching this scene man, i literally started to inhale as deep as i could and holding my breath as if i was in the spaceship with them.masterpiece of a movie
It’s still running in theatres
?
2:01 This shot is breathtaking
3:38 HOLY SHITBALLS
It's like just came out of a roller-coaster ride isn't it?
one hell of a trip
0:26
I can't help, but always laugh at that part. His reaction to Cooper saying "It's a sphere," had me dying the first time I saw it.
Lol poor Romilly man, talk about crap luck. Waits 23 years to die basically right after they wake Mann up. Arguably the best character.
The music to this movie is simply brilliant.
I watched this last night in 4k on my 70" as I was at the peak of a 5g mushroom trip, with good headphones and a subpac on (basically a subwoofer you wear like a backpack that transfers bass directly in to your spine, your eyeballs shake and your teeth chatter). It literally felt like I was with the crew, going through the wormhole myself, space dust and warped space-time were leaking out of the screen and in the room with me. Truly one of the most mesmerizing and meaningful moments of my life, anyone who's reading this, please do it at least once before you die!
i was looking for someone who did the same thing! No true way to describe the feeling.
@@euan6959 Honestly, there was a solid month where almost every trip I would watch at least a couple scenes from this lol, had to stop because I was going to know every line by heart and wanted to still be able to enjoy it
@@StickHits Bro 😭 5gs is such a crazy trip. I’m slowly graduating to 4gs
@@euan6959 Haha oh if you think that's intense I did 8 grams of penis envy (around 2x stronger than common strains) the other night, via pineapple juice extraction so it kicks in 2-3x faster and more intensely AND if you take 4-10 drops of lemon oil beforehand, it blocks certain receptors in your digestive system that absorb psilocybin (ones that are apparently responsible for nausea, although I haven't noticed a big improvement in nausea yet) but a side effect of this is that because these extra receptors are blocked beforehand, the only place your psilocybin has to go is your main serotonin receptors so doing that seems to increase the intensity of the whole trip by another 40%-70%, THAT was intense. If you have previous anxiety issues like me, look in to propranolol, it blocks your adrenaline system for a few hours and makes it almost impossible to have a panic attack, it's the only reason I was able to start using mushrooms to treat my mental issues and it saved my life.
@@StickHits oh god man that sounds awesome. Any experience with acid?
Interstellar is the most unique experience I’ve ever had in the cinema. This scene had my jaw on the floor. It was fascinating just as it was terrifying. Just like the crew of the Endurance, you had no idea what was gonna happen when they went into the wormhole. It felt like you were also on this journey into the unknown darkness of space. You can that’s exactly what Nolan was going for, to take the audience on an adventure.
This is the most visually stunning sci-fi movie ever made
Saw it yesterday in IMAX, after min. 5 watchings, still goosebumbs in many scenes
This movie was a service. Didn't do the greatest. But that is because it went over a lot of people's heads. Those of us that understand relativity were overjoyed by this film. Thank you Mr Nolan
4:03 when they finally arrive on other galaxy, the backsound really capture about the feeling of 'strange' or 'unknown' place. Beautiful.
A movie I'll never get tired of watching 💕
I can watch this film everyday and never get tired of it
The visuals are beautiful! Space is absolutely beautiful. You can almost say that space is like heaven but dangerous
The most impressive part of this scene is how spacetime unfolds back to normal when they finishnpassing through
I love how grounded in reality it looks
It doesn't have fancy ultra Super things on it
Like in star gate or star trek or whatever
You just see the other side warped from the gravity
Brand Inadvertently brought cooper back. Her fearlessness and welcoming of something she wasnt sure of, her goodness of heart, saved the human race.
Never thought of it like that! I just thought of it as the two time streams passing by briefly.
I wonder what you mean.
I thought my eyes were lying to me when I first saw this. For some reason, I could not believe what I was seeing...
There's something about this background music every time they give goosebumps
0:15 there’s no sound in space, exactly what the outside of the spaceship sounds like
i never seen a wormhole depiction being this mesmerizing where the start and the end were seamless
This film is a thing of majesty.
10 years ago this masterpiece was released and it's still as awe inspiring and breathtaking now as it was then.
EVERY scene in this movie brings me to tears. There is something that is SO familiar about all of this.. How did we get stuck here on Earth?
The music in this movie is beyond incredible
I really want to see this movie again on iMAX! Oh imax please bring it back
You can do this in VR. Just buy a Meta Quest 3
The music in this scene…and the entire movie…is obviously a masterpiece 😍
by far one of the most terrifying scenes of interstellar, this movie triggerd the megalophobia you never had
You read something like Xeelee or whatever where there’s wormholes, or either it’s this bright and epic thing like stargaze but I love how here it’s just the literal bending of space and time.
So beautiful and convays how long the journey is.
Genuinely. ... i got completely fascinated after seeing this movie. My vision towards universe has been changed completely ... feels like I'm getting more educated. Awesome movie and I never get tired watching this movie.
@Mihai Achim
A theory on how these navy UFO craft function...it works abit like a black hole...not my theory people alot smarter than me lol...but look up how a zero point warp drive works..it's a theory but a good one in my opinion.
A zero point warp drive could in theory have infinite energy....and there tech if it can manipulate the fabric of space could fold space time just like folding a piece of paper from point to point with a dot draw on ethier end.
Also i believe that why these craft move so fluidly and without making a sonic boom is because the craft itself isn't moving but the fabric of space around it....it bends space time...and as far as I'm aware the fabric of space has no mass so the craft would act like it's free from inertia or the restraints of using combustion fuels like we do.
If you watch the navy UFO video one looks like it has some kind of aura around it...that's it bending space time around the craft itself..there understanding of how gravity actually works is far ahead of what we know.
This is one of the reasons why i love astronomy and astrophotography
Scariest scene in the movie.
I cant imagine being there and witnessing that 😧
Hands down my favorite sci-fi film. Was an absolute treat watching it at an IMAX omni theater.
1:44 music and visuals in this part give a bit of a creepy feel to it despite looking beautiful, in my opinion.
Thank Hans Zimmer for being a master at making movie scores
I found it beautiful,not creepy at all!
Doina M. If you think about the context and what it implies going inside it as well as how small they look against this massive space time distortion then it can be a bit creepy in that sense.
Wow! What a movie! Can’t believe that’s 10 years since it was released! Thanks so much for posting
If you look the moment brand and the anomaly stop holding hands and the camera pans right 3:36 , you can see the anomaly take off to the side very fast! I never noticed that until I played it back at .25 speed!
You're right. Crazy.
Yo!!! I fucking noticed that now!!!!!
Holy shit
It's not an anomaly...
Beautiful to see details like another glowing star like sun
This shows perfectly the eerie wonder of space and how little we know about it epic
This will go down as a top ten sci fi classic. Best CGI I’ve ever seen
0:40 at this point I need to present our inattentive audience with some exposition.
This movie is incredible, finally watched the whole movie for the first time yesterday and it was amazing. This scene was a blast.
This movie legit blew me away in theaters. Its up there with Jurassic Park, Saving Private Ryan, and the Dark Knight
I don't know why I am so obsessed with this music.
2:48 is absolutely amazing
Simply stunning, epic movie. Needs a big screen.
For any nerds out there, coopers contact with brand from hyperspace caused a halt in the singularity of a wormhole.
In reality without a disturbance, they would’ve passed right through without any time being passed.
I watched the movie in cinema an hour ago and it's still a masterpiece.
(Movie released on this day 7 years ago - one hour on Miller planet)
Love how it first appears as a walled sphered dome
It's because it's bending light by it's gravitational pull. It's just an illusion.
@@LeastNationalistPole fascinating 🧐
As a space enthusiast, the explanation for a spherical wormhole and the events which follow are, taken together, one of the most fascinating things mankind has ever seen.
no one is talking about how short but perfectly understandable he explained a wormhole with a pen and paper
so beautiful, i love interstellar.
To think that these things are theoretically possible under the laws of physics is mind boggling to me…it really isn’t that crazy though when you think about the existence of black holes and how mysterious they are…it isn’t a stretch at all to think these things exist out there.
wormholes are so majestic, yet undiscovered and sound unrealisitc.
I was 17 when I saw this in the cinema, and at the time, I had never in my life seen anything like it. I'd seen wormholes depicted in sci-fi all the time but they never seemed accurate to real life. Something about this felt so real and visceral, as if the very laws of physics I was familiar with, were being warped right before my eyes. It was astonishing and terrifying.
The music is so eerie!!!! Beautiful scene!!!!!
This is terrifying and beautiful at the same time. Imagine trying this irl and you just explode lmao.
Saw this imax 4K huuuuuge screen wtf my life is, incredible moment ❤
2:47
I love that visual representation of space and time morphing into unfathomable shapes and forms as they travel through a higher dimension. Just awesome.
Except that's not what it would look like tho
But yeah the vfx here is amazing
@@luckyizzac Dude, stop taking things as completely literal. Obviously no one would know what it actually looks like lol that's why I said "representation"
@@barnacleboi2595 there are accurate simulations that can render a wormhole almost perfectly
just like how they rendered the blackhole on their own render engine, if they did a little more work they couldve made one for a wormhole too.
Watch the video by scott manley on wormholes. Accurate wormholes look a lot less cooler than interstellar wormhole, and I can see thats why interstellar made wormholes like that, which is why I think interstellar wormhole's vfx looks amazing, but not accurate