This is not a song, you don't have to pause every 5 seconds to say pointless stuffs nobody will listen to. And it's when the movie is over that you say your detailed opinion on stuffs!! This is simply unwatchable!
Or you could not watch, I enjoy the commentary, if you wanna watch it undisturbed maybe buy it yourself and watch in the comfort of your own home. Douche
I've watched this movie so many times and also watched so many reactions to it... I can't believe you basically figured it out on that first planet. Lol
The fact they gathered the best experts on black holes and they build a graphics engine JUST to make the thing as close as possible to what we know it's insane. btw the way Ellen Burstyn delivers "Because my dad promised me" its like a knive's killing blow to the heart. No the brother went to Arrakis apparently.
I saw this in a small town theater in indiana with my wife and I've never been to a movie where people just walked out in complete silence in awe. I mean the last quarter of the movie people were just crying all the way through. It was an experience I'll never forget.
I’ve seen so many Interstellar reactions & NOBODY has picked up on that transition from Murph’s video message to real time so i’m always waiting to see if the reactor picks up on that. So THANK YOU!🤣 & Great reaction as always!
I'm really glad you noticed that the corn was growing in the mountains. Nolan literally planted 500 acres of corn for this movie to show that they are growing corn EVERYWHERE they can.... Even in places you wouldn't normally farm... Theres like 1 crop left on earth- corn is literally ALL they eat, so it was important to show basically everything being covered by growing corn. Also- It pissed me off too when the teacher lady claimed we didnt go to the moon- cuz theres people who say that now
The Earth parts of the movie are set in southeastern Colorado (near Pueblo or La Junta based on the reservoir), the NASA base is the NORAD base at Cheyenne Mountain south of Colorado Springs they got a lot of farms there, not sure about corn (I know that area is more known for chilies and cantaloupes) (source: Colorado resident)
@@wheezus2000 The corn was planted and filmed in Alberta not far from Calgary. This is where all the corn and mountains in background were filmed. Though the movie was set in Colorado, the cornfield was in Alberta.
Interstellar is another film which was partially shot at Svínafellsjökull Glacier. The film's other filming location in Iceland was Máfabót, a low land area situated between the open sea and a river on the South Coast. This is honestly one of the most amazing sci-fi films out there, like ever, the attention to detail in this is through the roof. The science is real. Its nuts. This is as good as it can get for a true cinematic experience in this genre.
I’ve gone my whole life never finding a singular movie that I could call my favorite movie until I watched THIS one a couple times, that’s when I came to the conclusion that this is it. Everything about it is amazing and thought provoking. The music, science behind it, the Easter eggs, the story, the subtle connection to our current reality that this story alludes to. This is the first movie that will bring me to tears every time I watch it, especially as a father and that’s saying a lot because I don’t find myself tearing up for anything often. 10/10 if you ask me. And I’m fascinated at how much you caught on at the first time watching it. It took my dumb azz a few times lol. I wish there was a part two.
I’m only 5min in but I love how you are analyzing both the plot and the moviemaking. By the way the old people interviews on the screens were actual interviews from the dust bowl era (mixed in with the old Murph actress for her parts). “How do you expect people to critically think if you do not allow them all of the information?” Best line of the movie. But it was you not the movie. ;-)
Eagle eyes on the mountains in the beginning! You’re right! I never noticed that but I guess you can draw from it that people have had to move corn farming up out of the middle states like Nebraska to maybe Montana or even more north. At the same time he is able to drive to a nasa base…Idaho?
It was a joy to watch a reaction by someone who was not only not confused by the plot, but was actually correctly guessing upcoming plot points. Thank you. Keep on being you!
Dude, first pay no attention to that top Comment of the guy saying it was a bad reaction. The fact yours is actually different than every other one is a good thing. But more importantly THANK YOU!!! You’re the first reactor I’ve seen with my exact reaction, which was why the F would you ever go to a planet orbiting a black hole. That’s not a solution at all.
He’s not shocked that the ground isn’t straight because he understood the whole plan was to create an O’Neill cylinder. That’s what they were building before he left. This is the expected generation ship.
MRLBOYD: “This is heavy, guys, this is heavy…” Emmett Brown: There's that word again. "Heavy." Why are things so heavy in the future? Is there a problem with the Earth's gravitational pull?
@55:02 in his defense, he did just travel through a wormhole, get stuck on a tidalwave plant for 23 years, went into a tesseract inside of a black hole, and back. 😅 Great reaction! 😎👏👏
23:58 We first see this example with a pencil and a piece of paper in the space horror movie called "Event Horizon" starring Laurence Fishburne & Sam Niel. It's definitely a movie to check out sometime if you haven't seen it. Interstellar was amazing. Christopher Nolan keeps making masterpieces.
@@dust_bin_gaming7319 I'd never heard that "theory" before that the movies were connected. Because they technically aren't. But it's an interesting theory.
@@TimWing23 Yeah, it's not a theory. Never said it was. It's just a joke (that's why it's in quotations ^_^), because they both have Sam Neil, and both have him dealing with deamons of a sorts. xD
Another good movie to add to the recommends! One of my favs! But try to find the directors cut, they explain a bit more of certain things that happen than the theatrical cut did... which did leave some people stumped/let down originally.
@@dust_bin_gaming7319 The directors cut fills in the gaps I always sensed in the theatrical version. The missing character bits make it so much better.
Lots of benefits for a tornado or volcano or floods. It's changes the land scape. It also helps things grow. Some things can't even grow unless they have a forest fire
was so on point it made it sound like you watched the movie beforehand or at least read The Cliff Notes. That is very few people in the world that would have been able to come up with his answers you come up with the information in the movie to confirm. Such as human beings are the ones that are the aliens, nobody saw that coming until the end of the movie.
Absolutely love this movie (my favorite) and so glad to watch you catch on to everything! This movie is so great because it has all the science fiction you could want while also maintaining the "as close to reality as possible" approach, really helps us stay grounded throughout all the dimensional/time relativity business lol Also: we're here to watch YOU react, so all the pauses and little conversations with yourself about what you speculate is happening or just things you're thinking about while watching it- I'm FOR it. Please keep up all the commentary, you got great insight and it's always something to look forward to when MRLBOYD has a new reaction come out 🙏
I mean, I wouldn't be in shock to see non-flat land. Maybe because I've played to many games, but seeing a space station with land in a circle on a station isn't anything new to me at least. Though admittedly I'd want to have some fun with it. Like having a water balloon fight with my neighbors above my home on the other side.
Also want to add that I see most people hate Dr. Brandt but he’s actually my favorite in the movie. He resigned himself to the death of planet earth, and those humans in an attempt to save the species, but when the world threw a curveball at him in Cooper, even tho he knew there was no hope, he took a chance and swung. Without him doing that they don’t succeed. When Cooper says it’s them in the future, I’ve always thought originally he didn’t go and Plan B worked, but then they transcended and change that by going back in time and sending Cooper but that only works because of Dr. Brandt taking a chance when there was no logical reason too.
If you enjoyed Christopher Nolan, I don’t think you’ve reacted to Inception yet. I’d love to see you react to that. Also, I’d love to watch your brain power reacting to Memento. Please consider
They grew a 500 acre cornfield for the movie. It cost them $100 000 to create the farm. They later sold the corn that was left for $165 000. So this actually made money for the film instead of costing them.
do you know where that area is actually located? you said the field was sold, i’m just wondering if anyone’s actually bought that house and is living in it, also wondering where that was filmed
1 thing we definitely forget while we’re watching cooper walk the farm is the brother was in the documentary in the beginning and end they recorded years before she was sick while also showing the brother with a eye patch meaning he was sickly. He died for sure 💔but the documentary was the last thing they filmed together. I think positive knowing coop got film of his son growing up happy and sad. 💯
I've seen this movie countless times and watched even more reactions, and yours was unlike any I've seen. Great video. I always learn something new when I watch this movie, and you gave me even more to think about for the next time.
almost broke me when mentioning insulting people all the time without realizing it. 🤣 i quite often think about conversations that i've had later on and been like.... crap.... probably shouldn't have said that. 🤔
The benefit of a tornado is that it is a dissipative process that releases energy stored in the atmosphere, same with hurricanes. These are just a couple mechanisms for how the Earth regulates its thermal energy. The act of applying energy to do work and increase the entropy of the Universe is a transformative process we sometimes call Chaos. Sometimes this energy gets transferred into a house and transforms it into a pile of rubble and that can be unfortunate for sure. One of our big problems is recognizing the various flows of energy in the world, expressed through all it's physical phenomena and recognizing that humanity is itself just another kind of flow, a branch of the same tree, a tributary of the same river, that needs to move harmoniously with all the others. The Earth isn't trying to destroy us, it isn't trying to do anything. The only thing happening is continuous change.
I think it is not the same disorientation when the only habitat you know is flat, that when you have traveled into space, are familiar with artificial gravity created through rotating the ship, visiting two different alien planets, you step into a round space station, it is not the same shock, besides, he had seen the model of the space station before starting the trip, so let's give that to Cooper. Your response to the robot having to deal with humans is one of the most Asperger things I have seen in your reactions. I know you have mentioned before you are in the spectrum, but in most cases, other than the meticulous use of language, there are not so obvious signs to an external observer. Agreeing with TARS on how to deal with humans is also one of the reasons I believe I might be undiagnosed, but in the spectrum. Finally, thank you for the comments on shots, types of camera, lighting, etc., your knowledge of cameras and filming is very enlightening when watching your reactions to movies.
Man, I absolutely Understand your "We are back" tic, when emotions run too wild. I have the same difficulty, have been suppressing difficult emotion all my life. Just got diagnosed with ADHD few months ago and have been exploring the ground of dealing with the emotions, instead of suppressing them or coping always. Just wish that I was diagnosed before, not at 33 yo, but was not possible. Grew up in extreme poverty, was the first ever from my family to graduate highschool, so they would not even comprehend the concept, probably. But I feel you man, when the sparks changes to amber is hard to control and we have to take care of the dry fields.
Great video. It is a unique take that you pause a lot and give your own perspective on things. This is not normal for most video reactions so I guess that's where the "backlash" came from. However, as always, it is a great display of intelligence. You have great understanding of the world and add depth/perspective to many details of the scenes. One thing I found interesting though, is that it seemed difficult for you to comprehend or rationalize the stance of the female teacher at school. She was not "herself" in the movie. Instead, she was pretty much the representation of the worldview of their era, where anything not used to generate more food is a waste. This is perfectly rational if food is literally the most important thing in the world.
Homie probably didn’t want us to see him cry because he literally edited out the entire scene of Coop’s reaction to the messages his kids sent him as well as a bunch of other tear jerking scenes, including his entire interaction with Murph at the end, the only part he kept in was “because my dad promised me.” Lol
You are bang on with the dust bowl comparison! The soil became to dry and nutrition less causing massive amounts of dust storms and famine. This movie took that idea and went global level issue dust bowl.
28:53 Einstein didn’t necessarily discover black holes, essentially his theory of special relativity discovered them and it wasnt until about 30 years later when Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar theorized stars with enough mass eventually run out of fuel and collapse using Einstein’s theory of special relativity. All that being said id highly suggest reading up on Stephen Hawking’s theory of hawking radiation, it very well could be humanity’s key to learning whats past the event horizon without ever having to travel past.
Two things about filming that you kinda picked up on. The interviews were actually people who lived in the Dust bowl, so that's probably why it sounded so familiar. Also the farm was something they built for the movie, so they could do whatever they wanted to it. They ended up selling a lot of it as well after they finished filming.
Man, I loved this review! I've seen this movie several times - one of my favorites (maybe #1). You caught onto everything ahead of time and had some good observations throughout. One thing I was surprised to hear you say that he should have been surprised that the ground is curved. I figured you knew they were on a space station. Coop has been flying around in a rotating habitat to simulate gravity, so I expect he would be aware of the design of a large space station. If you remember in the beginning, Dr. Brand, the father, basically explained that the NASA facility was a cylindrical space station waiting to be launched. Anyway, really enjoyed your commentary. I love had all of Christopher Nolan movies requires a second look. As of today, I finished watching every movie he produced, including an interesting 3min short.
16:17 - okay, I'm officially impressed 😂 44:54 - watching someone who understands the science watch this is scratching an itch in my brain I didn't even know existed.
Good catch on the people talking at the beginning. Except for the old Murphy, the people talking are nit actors but are actually clips from the Ken Burns documentary on the American Dust Bowl so they actually lived through the dust bowl.
31:20 My boy figured it out WELL before the movie showed it! MrLBoyd on a whole different level! My father watched this movie like three times and he still didn't get it!
Brother was at least 5 years older than Murf and is long dead. Remember he and his whole family rejected western medicine - subtly suggesting they were extremely religious. Not a plot whole, just easily presumed and not important to the story arc.
“Rejected western medicine” wtf are you talking about? Did you even watch the movie? It was clearly pointed out that the gov had gotten rid of all the essential machinery for proper healthcare when he had the meeting with the teacher and brought up the MRI’s. They got rid of those like they “got rid” of NASA. Nothing about religion was insinuated at all in this movie. You clearly failed the “comprehension” portion of your standardized testing.
The brother was violent and impulsive. Not many people care after that. And it's already a long movie so they didn't get into it. They could have had him look at a grave marker to indicate he passed. Which he likely did. But then we wouldn't be talking about it. Some think he was one of the old men in the documentary though. Just before Murph spoke in it talking about their farm.
Cooper Station - as well as the research institute - is a cylinder. It rotates in space, so that centrifugal forces imitate the gravitation on earth and people can walk normally on the rounded surface. on the sides of the cylinder, lenses and mirrors capture the sunlight and direct it to the inside of the cylinder. It's a common concept on how to live in space, look up "O'Neill colony" in wiki
Love how everyone’s reaction to Brand saying she wants to follow her heart is “do the opposite because she’s biased” when Being biased in her heart has literally nothing to do with the actual data. she clearly says Edmonds planet shows way better DATA. She was honest about both her feelings AND the Data but everyone focuses on just the feelings part, instead of what ends up being the correct objective choice.
Yes to be authentic for the recordings at the start they literally copied almost word for word statements given to historians by Dust Bowl survivors! Though the underlying cause is different in the movie from the real past, the result is the same: too much land with no plants growing in it. No roots means nothing to hold the soil & moisture together & thus every windy day, rain or not, becomes a dust storm by default. And then those who breathe in too much dust begin developing lung problems, leading to other health issues. All the science in this movie (up to the guessing about how wormholes would work & what's inside a black hole & where we are heading as we continue to evolve) is actually spot-on, which is why we really do need to take care of our planet.
Great reaction MRLBOYD! Can I suggest you watch Contact (1997). It shares a lot with Interstellar. Just like Interstellar it’s very science based, and by that I mean that except for the plot assumption, they try to do everything 100% realistic based on how science works. It’s the brainchild of the late great Carl Sagan of “Cosmos” fame. It features a strong intelligent female lead, a great father/daughter relationship, a big role for Matthew McConaughey, and a lot of deep things to think about. Despite the age the special affects hold up really well.
My grandpa lived through the Dust Bowl. His family were farmers in Oklahoma (aka "Okies". Though that term was definitely a slur so he hated it). He left school in the 4th grade in order to find odd jobs in various states out West and up North ASAP (the laws re: school and child labor then were pretty loose 😂), as he was the only male in his large family at that point. His dad was really old and was so ill with Dementia he was in a home by the time my grandpa was probably a toddler; My grandpa was the baby of a huge mixed family (14 kids, I think. 3 kids in my great grandpa's first family. His 1st wife died young, then he remarried and had 11 more kids 😳😂). He had a brother, but he died of some kind of illness when he was a child. Scarlet Fever, I think. Grandpa never got a chance to go back to school, but he was the wisest, most hardworking person I ever knew ❤ Anyway, anytime I start to feel like my life is "hard", I think of him living through the Depression, Dust Bowl, and then serving in WWII. A great remedy to quit my whining and instead be grateful 😂
You were asking about where theyd be with corn and mountains... With NORAD youve got your answer of Colorado since he said he'd only be a few hours. I live in Denver and NORAD is about 1-1.5 hours away. We have plenty of corn farmers here, quite a lot actually.
53:10 It's not a group of people that left Earth in the past, it's the descendants of humanity in the distant future, when they've evolved beyond our current form. But while they're powerful, they still need humanity to survive so that they themselves can eventually exist.
They grew the crops for the movie (this is not CGI) and then sold the rest for profit. they actually drove with a flat tyre into a corn field. Christopher Nolan doesn't like CGI, but when he uses it, he does so perfectly.
He isn't shocked by the ground because he understands in order to build a spacestation that large and maintain gravity. It would have to be laid out like that and spin to create gravity.. Come on mannn.
Not sure you understand the difference between moving a HUGE space station into orbit then space and creating simple gravity for the occupants inside. If you'll recall. The stations were already partially built before solving the equation. Spinning was used on the endurance and would have in effect likely been the go to on the stations as well as they don't need a significant amount of energy to create basic earth gravity. We can do it now.@@volosh67gayo49
Man I never noticed the mountains before. You're absolutely right, that is deff not Iowa, Nebraska or any other corn states. I'm guessing Nolan did this to portray the imbalance of the environment. Things are all out of whack. I'm guessing it's set in either Appalachia, or Catskills
I mean... I live in Oregon, I've got mountains, hills and corn fields. This particular field was a 500 acre field in Calgary that Nolan had planted just for the movie. Afterwards, he sold the corn.
So Can I make some requests? If you have seen any of these movies and reacted to them then disregard. Best Space Movie imo is APOLLO 13, 2nd THE MARTIAN, and 3rd INTERSTELLAR . Here are my thoughts in a nutshell. Interstellar was too fantastical not a story that I can see ever happening certainly no time soon. The Martian on the other hand is not that far fetched and could be closer to the realm of possibility in the not-too-distant future. Apollo 13 is history and did happen. All three movies are great and packed with star studded casts. Enjoyed your insightful reaction to this and hope to see you react to these other two movies soon.
Unfortunately, the brother must be dead. He was older than Murph. And Murph is barely alive, and even that may be due to her cryo-sleep delaying death.
I feel like they botched the ending. Two things that bug me to no end, one he never asked about his son, and two he walked into a room with all his family and grandkids and great grandkids, and didn't even say. His daughters children and he acted as if they weren't there, then just left. Made no sense.
The daughter seemed to hang on long enough to say goodbye to her father. She was ready to die after that. The brother would have been long gone and the rest of the family had no emotional tie to him. He was a stranger.
I don't think its a plot hole. We can pretend parents don't have a favorites but they do. Otherwise have to take my hat off, never seen some one predict this movies ending so early on. Some one clearly pays attention because info and clues were there from beginning. Most of us missed them.
This is so weird because Brand must have been a teenager when Edmunds left on his mission. It was like that little girl obsession in the movie My Girl.
I believe the old man on the television screen speaking before you see old Murphy IS the brother but he must have died by the time Cooper arrived at the station.
This is not a song, you don't have to pause every 5 seconds to say pointless stuffs nobody will listen to. And it's when the movie is over that you say your detailed opinion on stuffs!! This is simply unwatchable!
Noted
@@MRLBOYDMOVIEREVIEWSyour videos are great, just cause he can’t comprehend it doesn’t mean it’s bad
Or you could not watch, I enjoy the commentary, if you wanna watch it undisturbed maybe buy it yourself and watch in the comfort of your own home. Douche
Dude just wants to watch you watch a movie apparently
I think it's the best part of his channel
I wish I were friends w/ this guy. He’s so engaging and well spoken
I know you mean the well but don't tell a black man "he's well spoken" we hate that lol
I’d be too intimidated to be his friend…I’d love to be a student. That’s how I feel when I watch. I’m in awe.
@@kirrrby101 it's true though. he's obviously very educated and intellectual, more so than most people (any color) you would run into.
@@kirrrby101 uh-oh, microaggression alert! 🚨🚨
@@kirrrby101I like that
I've watched this movie so many times and also watched so many reactions to it... I can't believe you basically figured it out on that first planet. Lol
I know right lol
Yeah I can’t believe it either 😭
You and I both exactly! Lol. That was my exact take away and I’ve also seen this and also reactions many times lol
it took me about 5 times before i could even figure out wtf was going on at the end.
The fact they gathered the best experts on black holes and they build a graphics engine JUST to make the thing as close as possible to what we know it's insane.
btw the way Ellen Burstyn delivers "Because my dad promised me" its like a knive's killing blow to the heart.
No the brother went to Arrakis apparently.
Not the best expertS , but the best expert, Kip Thorne.
Johnathan Nolan also got a masters in astrophysics leading up to this movie iirc
Creating the black hole for this movie nearly melted the super computer they used to do the math.
I saw this in a small town theater in indiana with my wife and I've never been to a movie where people just walked out in complete silence in awe. I mean the last quarter of the movie people were just crying all the way through. It was an experience I'll never forget.
i wish i knew what i was missing when this came out. hoping for some 10 year anniversary showings, ill do whatever it takes to get my hands on tickets
I’ve seen so many Interstellar reactions & NOBODY has picked up on that transition from Murph’s video message to real time so i’m always waiting to see if the reactor picks up on that. So THANK YOU!🤣 & Great reaction as always!
Haha right? Oh ya that’s the older woman as a child. Wtf?? Bro is insane!
I think many also don't pick up on that Cooper at the end is time travelling back to Edmunds planet, that also orbits the black hole.
I'm really glad you noticed that the corn was growing in the mountains. Nolan literally planted 500 acres of corn for this movie to show that they are growing corn EVERYWHERE they can.... Even in places you wouldn't normally farm... Theres like 1 crop left on earth- corn is literally ALL they eat, so it was important to show basically everything being covered by growing corn. Also- It pissed me off too when the teacher lady claimed we didnt go to the moon- cuz theres people who say that now
The Earth parts of the movie are set in southeastern Colorado (near Pueblo or La Junta based on the reservoir), the NASA base is the NORAD base at Cheyenne Mountain south of Colorado Springs
they got a lot of farms there, not sure about corn (I know that area is more known for chilies and cantaloupes)
(source: Colorado resident)
@@wheezus2000 The corn was planted and filmed in Alberta not far from Calgary. This is where all the corn and mountains in background were filmed. Though the movie was set in Colorado, the cornfield was in Alberta.
Interstellar is another film which was partially shot at Svínafellsjökull Glacier. The film's other filming location in Iceland was Máfabót, a low land area situated between the open sea and a river on the South Coast.
This is honestly one of the most amazing sci-fi films out there, like ever, the attention to detail in this is through the roof. The science is real. Its nuts. This is as good as it can get for a true cinematic experience in this genre.
It's impossible for any father not to melt at the "Because my Dad promised me" line at the end. It gets me every time.
I’ve gone my whole life never finding a singular movie that I could call my favorite movie until I watched THIS one a couple times, that’s when I came to the conclusion that this is it. Everything about it is amazing and thought provoking. The music, science behind it, the Easter eggs, the story, the subtle connection to our current reality that this story alludes to. This is the first movie that will bring me to tears every time I watch it, especially as a father and that’s saying a lot because I don’t find myself tearing up for anything often. 10/10 if you ask me. And I’m fascinated at how much you caught on at the first time watching it. It took my dumb azz a few times lol. I wish there was a part two.
I’m only 5min in but I love how you are analyzing both the plot and the moviemaking. By the way the old people interviews on the screens were actual interviews from the dust bowl era (mixed in with the old Murph actress for her parts).
“How do you expect people to critically think if you do not allow them all of the information?” Best line of the movie. But it was you not the movie. ;-)
Eagle eyes on the mountains in the beginning! You’re right! I never noticed that but I guess you can draw from it that people have had to move corn farming up out of the middle states like Nebraska to maybe Montana or even more north. At the same time he is able to drive to a nasa base…Idaho?
It was a joy to watch a reaction by someone who was not only not confused by the plot, but was actually correctly guessing upcoming plot points. Thank you. Keep on being you!
First rule of Nolan films "things are not sequential.
Dude, first pay no attention to that top Comment of the guy saying it was a bad reaction.
The fact yours is actually different than every other one is a good thing. But more importantly THANK YOU!!! You’re the first reactor I’ve seen with my exact reaction, which was why the F would you ever go to a planet orbiting a black hole. That’s not a solution at all.
Oh snap B out here doing movies? lets get it. I'll be starting my binge now.
I lived in Saudi Arabia for 6 years. These dust storms look quaint. The ones during the dust bowl of the 30s seemed quite a bit worse, too.
He’s not shocked that the ground isn’t straight because he understood the whole plan was to create an O’Neill cylinder. That’s what they were building before he left. This is the expected generation ship.
MRLBOYD: “This is heavy, guys, this is heavy…”
Emmett Brown: There's that word again. "Heavy." Why are things so heavy in the future? Is there a problem with the Earth's gravitational pull?
@55:02 in his defense, he did just travel through a wormhole, get stuck on a tidalwave plant for 23 years, went into a tesseract inside of a black hole, and back. 😅 Great reaction! 😎👏👏
23:58 We first see this example with a pencil and a piece of paper in the space horror movie called "Event Horizon" starring Laurence Fishburne & Sam Niel. It's definitely a movie to check out sometime if you haven't seen it.
Interstellar was amazing. Christopher Nolan keeps making masterpieces.
Then after Event Horizon he can watch the 'prequel', "In The Mouth of Madness". ^_^
@@dust_bin_gaming7319Any movie with Sam Neill is great but In The Mouth Of Madness is one of my favourites.
@@dust_bin_gaming7319 I'd never heard that "theory" before that the movies were connected. Because they technically aren't. But it's an interesting theory.
@@TimWing23 Yeah, it's not a theory. Never said it was. It's just a joke (that's why it's in quotations ^_^), because they both have Sam Neil, and both have him dealing with deamons of a sorts. xD
The Abyss has an interesting take on surviving the pressures of deep water. It’s a James Cameron movie. Some scenes were very intense.
Another good movie to add to the recommends! One of my favs!
But try to find the directors cut, they explain a bit more of certain things that happen than the theatrical cut did... which did leave some people stumped/let down originally.
@@dust_bin_gaming7319 The directors cut fills in the gaps I always sensed in the theatrical version. The missing character bits make it so much better.
@@ruthsaunders9507 It's my preferred version for sure! It makes the 'why' have a much more profound impact.
Love how you are able to figure things out as they go, and i throughly enjoyed your reaction!
Lots of benefits for a tornado or volcano or floods. It's changes the land scape. It also helps things grow. Some things can't even grow unless they have a forest fire
was so on point it made it sound like you watched the movie beforehand or at least read The Cliff Notes. That is very few people in the world that would have been able to come up with his answers you come up with the information in the movie to confirm. Such as human beings are the ones that are the aliens, nobody saw that coming until the end of the movie.
Absolutely love this movie (my favorite) and so glad to watch you catch on to everything! This movie is so great because it has all the science fiction you could want while also maintaining the "as close to reality as possible" approach, really helps us stay grounded throughout all the dimensional/time relativity business lol
Also: we're here to watch YOU react, so all the pauses and little conversations with yourself about what you speculate is happening or just things you're thinking about while watching it- I'm FOR it. Please keep up all the commentary, you got great insight and it's always something to look forward to when MRLBOYD has a new reaction come out 🙏
It was filmed in Southern Alberta where you can indeed find corn growing within sight of the Rockies. Geologically Colorado would be most similar
I was going to say Colorado . But the "mountains" didnt seem bigger than hills.
I mean, I wouldn't be in shock to see non-flat land. Maybe because I've played to many games, but seeing a space station with land in a circle on a station isn't anything new to me at least. Though admittedly I'd want to have some fun with it. Like having a water balloon fight with my neighbors above my home on the other side.
32:13 yeah, this is the part where all the tears come streaming down
Also want to add that I see most people hate Dr. Brandt but he’s actually my favorite in the movie.
He resigned himself to the death of planet earth, and those humans in an attempt to save the species, but when the world threw a curveball at him in Cooper, even tho he knew there was no hope, he took a chance and swung. Without him doing that they don’t succeed.
When Cooper says it’s them in the future, I’ve always thought originally he didn’t go and Plan B worked, but then they transcended and change that by going back in time and sending Cooper but that only works because of Dr. Brandt taking a chance when there was no logical reason too.
Great reaction man. You are a great person to watch this always love the reactions
This is my dream come true, you first time reacting to Interstellar. I had no idea you have never seen this before! 😱😱
If you enjoyed Christopher Nolan, I don’t think you’ve reacted to Inception yet. I’d love to see you react to that. Also, I’d love to watch your brain power reacting to Memento. Please consider
They grew a 500 acre cornfield for the movie. It cost them $100 000 to create the farm. They later sold the corn that was left for $165 000.
So this actually made money for the film instead of costing them.
Interesting tidbit. Thanks.
do you know where that area is actually located? you said the field was sold, i’m just wondering if anyone’s actually bought that house and is living in it, also wondering where that was filmed
@@the_ghost_orchid It was at a place in Canada called Pekisko in the province of Alberta in Canada but the house was just a prop shell.
1 thing we definitely forget while we’re watching cooper walk the farm is the brother was in the documentary in the beginning and end they recorded years before she was sick while also showing the brother with a eye patch meaning he was sickly. He died for sure 💔but the documentary was the last thing they filmed together. I think positive knowing coop got film of his son growing up happy and sad. 💯
I've seen this movie countless times and watched even more reactions, and yours was unlike any I've seen. Great video. I always learn something new when I watch this movie, and you gave me even more to think about for the next time.
almost broke me when mentioning insulting people all the time without realizing it. 🤣 i quite often think about conversations that i've had later on and been like.... crap.... probably shouldn't have said that. 🤔
Love your style of reacting, you've earned yourself a new subscriber!
The benefit of a tornado is that it is a dissipative process that releases energy stored in the atmosphere, same with hurricanes. These are just a couple mechanisms for how the Earth regulates its thermal energy. The act of applying energy to do work and increase the entropy of the Universe is a transformative process we sometimes call Chaos. Sometimes this energy gets transferred into a house and transforms it into a pile of rubble and that can be unfortunate for sure. One of our big problems is recognizing the various flows of energy in the world, expressed through all it's physical phenomena and recognizing that humanity is itself just another kind of flow, a branch of the same tree, a tributary of the same river, that needs to move harmoniously with all the others. The Earth isn't trying to destroy us, it isn't trying to do anything. The only thing happening is continuous change.
I think it is not the same disorientation when the only habitat you know is flat, that when you have traveled into space, are familiar with artificial gravity created through rotating the ship, visiting two different alien planets, you step into a round space station, it is not the same shock, besides, he had seen the model of the space station before starting the trip, so let's give that to Cooper.
Your response to the robot having to deal with humans is one of the most Asperger things I have seen in your reactions. I know you have mentioned before you are in the spectrum, but in most cases, other than the meticulous use of language, there are not so obvious signs to an external observer. Agreeing with TARS on how to deal with humans is also one of the reasons I believe I might be undiagnosed, but in the spectrum.
Finally, thank you for the comments on shots, types of camera, lighting, etc., your knowledge of cameras and filming is very enlightening when watching your reactions to movies.
Man, I absolutely Understand your "We are back" tic, when emotions run too wild. I have the same difficulty, have been suppressing difficult emotion all my life. Just got diagnosed with ADHD few months ago and have been exploring the ground of dealing with the emotions, instead of suppressing them or coping always. Just wish that I was diagnosed before, not at 33 yo, but was not possible. Grew up in extreme poverty, was the first ever from my family to graduate highschool, so they would not even comprehend the concept, probably. But I feel you man, when the sparks changes to amber is hard to control and we have to take care of the dry fields.
Great video. It is a unique take that you pause a lot and give your own perspective on things. This is not normal for most video reactions so I guess that's where the "backlash" came from. However, as always, it is a great display of intelligence. You have great understanding of the world and add depth/perspective to many details of the scenes. One thing I found interesting though, is that it seemed difficult for you to comprehend or rationalize the stance of the female teacher at school. She was not "herself" in the movie. Instead, she was pretty much the representation of the worldview of their era, where anything not used to generate more food is a waste. This is perfectly rational if food is literally the most important thing in the world.
I really enjoy your reactions and how you do them. - You have an important way of viewing the world and synthesis in thinking, and I appreciate it.
He was basically in the 5th dimension, I think he can handle a curved ground
Interstellar is my favorite movie of all time. Matthew M’s performance is perfection. The raw emotion that he shows, you cannot teach that.
great stuff brother!
Homie probably didn’t want us to see him cry because he literally edited out the entire scene of Coop’s reaction to the messages his kids sent him as well as a bunch of other tear jerking scenes, including his entire interaction with Murph at the end, the only part he kept in was “because my dad promised me.” Lol
He doesn't cry, he has Asperger's. The full reaction is on Patreon
Aspergers is no longer a diagnosis in the DSM. He is on the the spectrum. You're welcome.@@mrlboydschannelmanager
I didnt Cry at all
Saved me an hour, cheers. (I actually like this guys channels a lot, but I ain't watching an Interstellar reaction unless there are waterworks haha)
love your style of reactions, keep it up big dawg! :D
Can't wait for you to try and explain TENET....
You are bang on with the dust bowl comparison! The soil became to dry and nutrition less causing massive amounts of dust storms and famine. This movie took that idea and went global level issue dust bowl.
I love how you can pick up on a character's deception immediately.
When you started hoping for Stargate, I also wanted it to be true. Lol
We all want it to be true lol!
hehe yea, that was quite funny. i havent seen anybody thinking about a Stargate at that point, but i love it :D
first you react to my favorite band tool.. now my favorite movie… i’m heating up my popcorn rn
28:53 Einstein didn’t necessarily discover black holes, essentially his theory of special relativity discovered them and it wasnt until about 30 years later when Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar theorized stars with enough mass eventually run out of fuel and collapse using Einstein’s theory of special relativity. All that being said id highly suggest reading up on Stephen Hawking’s theory of hawking radiation, it very well could be humanity’s key to learning whats past the event horizon without ever having to travel past.
Two things about filming that you kinda picked up on. The interviews were actually people who lived in the Dust bowl, so that's probably why it sounded so familiar. Also the farm was something they built for the movie, so they could do whatever they wanted to it. They ended up selling a lot of it as well after they finished filming.
Man, I loved this review! I've seen this movie several times - one of my favorites (maybe #1). You caught onto everything ahead of time and had some good observations throughout. One thing I was surprised to hear you say that he should have been surprised that the ground is curved. I figured you knew they were on a space station. Coop has been flying around in a rotating habitat to simulate gravity, so I expect he would be aware of the design of a large space station. If you remember in the beginning, Dr. Brand, the father, basically explained that the NASA facility was a cylindrical space station waiting to be launched. Anyway, really enjoyed your commentary. I love had all of Christopher Nolan movies requires a second look. As of today, I finished watching every movie he produced, including an interesting 3min short.
16:17 - okay, I'm officially impressed 😂
44:54 - watching someone who understands the science watch this is scratching an itch in my brain I didn't even know existed.
Looking forward for all the crazy stuff to kick in and see Mr Boyd react!!
I’ve never met anyone call the plot of this movie 😂👏🏼 so impressed! Love your reactions!
Christopher Nolan had all the crops in this movie grown specifically for this film.
Exactly, and I think he sold them for a profit
I just want to say that this is probably my favorite Nolan film.
Loved your reaction. It’s one of my too 10 movies.
somebody finally grasped they were farming in the mountains, thank you.
Yes!!! Been waiting for you to react to this movie. It's my favorite of all time.
Good catch on the people talking at the beginning. Except for the old Murphy, the people talking are nit actors but are actually clips from the Ken Burns documentary on the American Dust Bowl so they actually lived through the dust bowl.
look at you figuring this all out so quick, Bravo
31:20 My boy figured it out WELL before the movie showed it! MrLBoyd on a whole different level!
My father watched this movie like three times and he still didn't get it!
Brother was at least 5 years older than Murf and is long dead. Remember he and his whole family rejected western medicine - subtly suggesting they were extremely religious. Not a plot whole, just easily presumed and not important to the story arc.
I just assumed that unlike Murph, he didn't choose to enter cryosleep to wait for his dad he assumed was long dead.
In addition to all those, Murph probably also just got better treatment as the savior of the human race
*hole
Agreed but I do wish the brother was included a bit more & his character had better closure.
“Rejected western medicine” wtf are you talking about? Did you even watch the movie? It was clearly pointed out that the gov had gotten rid of all the essential machinery for proper healthcare when he had the meeting with the teacher and brought up the MRI’s. They got rid of those like they “got rid” of NASA. Nothing about religion was insinuated at all in this movie. You clearly failed the “comprehension” portion of your standardized testing.
The brother was violent and impulsive. Not many people care after that. And it's already a long movie so they didn't get into it.
They could have had him look at a grave marker to indicate he passed. Which he likely did. But then we wouldn't be talking about it.
Some think he was one of the old men in the documentary though. Just before Murph spoke in it talking about their farm.
You would LOVE “TENNET “ it’s Nolan’s next that came out during Covid , it’s a bit more complicated for sure but amazing also
Hands down favorite movie of all time
This film always makes me cry. And I'm not just saying this..
Cooper Station - as well as the research institute - is a cylinder. It rotates in space, so that centrifugal forces imitate the gravitation on earth and people can walk normally on the rounded surface. on the sides of the cylinder, lenses and mirrors capture the sunlight and direct it to the inside of the cylinder. It's a common concept on how to live in space, look up "O'Neill colony" in wiki
Love how everyone’s reaction to Brand saying she wants to follow her heart is “do the opposite because she’s biased” when Being biased in her heart has literally nothing to do with the actual data. she clearly says Edmonds planet shows way better DATA. She was honest about both her feelings AND the Data but everyone focuses on just the feelings part, instead of what ends up being the correct objective choice.
Yes to be authentic for the recordings at the start they literally copied almost word for word statements given to historians by Dust Bowl survivors! Though the underlying cause is different in the movie from the real past, the result is the same: too much land with no plants growing in it. No roots means nothing to hold the soil & moisture together & thus every windy day, rain or not, becomes a dust storm by default. And then those who breathe in too much dust begin developing lung problems, leading to other health issues.
All the science in this movie (up to the guessing about how wormholes would work & what's inside a black hole & where we are heading as we continue to evolve) is actually spot-on, which is why we really do need to take care of our planet.
Great reaction MRLBOYD! Can I suggest you watch Contact (1997). It shares a lot with Interstellar. Just like Interstellar it’s very science based, and by that I mean that except for the plot assumption, they try to do everything 100% realistic based on how science works. It’s the brainchild of the late great Carl Sagan of “Cosmos” fame. It features a strong intelligent female lead, a great father/daughter relationship, a big role for Matthew McConaughey, and a lot of deep things to think about. Despite the age the special affects hold up really well.
Noted! Thank you!
My grandpa lived through the Dust Bowl. His family were farmers in Oklahoma (aka "Okies". Though that term was definitely a slur so he hated it).
He left school in the 4th grade in order to find odd jobs in various states out West and up North ASAP (the laws re: school and child labor then were pretty loose 😂), as he was the only male in his large family at that point.
His dad was really old and was so ill with Dementia he was in a home by the time my grandpa was probably a toddler; My grandpa was the baby of a huge mixed family (14 kids, I think. 3 kids in my great grandpa's first family. His 1st wife died young, then he remarried and had 11 more kids 😳😂). He had a brother, but he died of some kind of illness when he was a child. Scarlet Fever, I think.
Grandpa never got a chance to go back to school, but he was the wisest, most hardworking person I ever knew ❤
Anyway, anytime I start to feel like my life is "hard", I think of him living through the Depression, Dust Bowl, and then serving in WWII. A great remedy to quit my whining and instead be grateful 😂
Interesting. My family is from Oklahoma and I've heard the term "Okie" all the time growing up. Never knew it originated from a slur.
I think you can just assume the son is dead, since he was older than Murph and we see Murph dying of old age
The movie is a visual masterpiece as is the soundtrack. It's amazing. Even if this movie had no dialogue, the music would carry it.
You were asking about where theyd be with corn and mountains... With NORAD youve got your answer of Colorado since he said he'd only be a few hours. I live in Denver and NORAD is about 1-1.5 hours away. We have plenty of corn farmers here, quite a lot actually.
This is a masterpiece. Thank you for watching it!!
53:10 It's not a group of people that left Earth in the past, it's the descendants of humanity in the distant future, when they've evolved beyond our current form. But while they're powerful, they still need humanity to survive so that they themselves can eventually exist.
Finally! Very much looking forward to this.
They grew the crops for the movie (this is not CGI) and then sold the rest for profit. they actually drove with a flat tyre into a corn field. Christopher Nolan doesn't like CGI, but when he uses it, he does so perfectly.
The best thing about this movie reaction is in fact your mind . Really you have a very excellent mind bro. I liked and I subscribed just for that
He isn't shocked by the ground because he understands in order to build a spacestation that large and maintain gravity. It would have to be laid out like that and spin to create gravity.. Come on mannn.
Not really.. not just the rotation, becouse now they solved how to manipulate gravity with the equation so..
Not sure you understand the difference between moving a HUGE space station into orbit then space and creating simple gravity for the occupants inside. If you'll recall. The stations were already partially built before solving the equation. Spinning was used on the endurance and would have in effect likely been the go to on the stations as well as they don't need a significant amount of energy to create basic earth gravity. We can do it now.@@volosh67gayo49
Newton is the gravity guy. Einstein is relativity and time, more than he was gravity.
Yay. I'm so happy to watch this!!
Man I never noticed the mountains before. You're absolutely right, that is deff not Iowa, Nebraska or any other corn states. I'm guessing Nolan did this to portray the imbalance of the environment. Things are all out of whack. I'm guessing it's set in either Appalachia, or Catskills
I mean... I live in Oregon, I've got mountains, hills and corn fields. This particular field was a 500 acre field in Calgary that Nolan had planted just for the movie. Afterwards, he sold the corn.
People grow corn everywhere.
So Can I make some requests? If you have seen any of these movies and reacted to them then disregard. Best Space Movie imo is APOLLO 13, 2nd THE MARTIAN, and 3rd INTERSTELLAR . Here are my thoughts in a nutshell. Interstellar was too fantastical not a story that I can see ever happening certainly no time soon. The Martian on the other hand is not that far fetched and could be closer to the realm of possibility in the not-too-distant future. Apollo 13 is history and did happen. All three movies are great and packed with star studded casts. Enjoyed your insightful reaction to this and hope to see you react to these other two movies soon.
I'm gonna need you to stop being 5000iq and figuring the whole movie out before stuff happens XD
Unfortunately, the brother must be dead. He was older than Murph. And Murph is barely alive, and even that may be due to her cryo-sleep delaying death.
I feel like they botched the ending. Two things that bug me to no end, one he never asked about his son, and two he walked into a room with all his family and grandkids and great grandkids, and didn't even say. His daughters children and he acted as if they weren't there, then just left. Made no sense.
The daughter seemed to hang on long enough to say goodbye to her father. She was ready to die after that. The brother would have been long gone and the rest of the family had no emotional tie to him. He was a stranger.
I don't think its a plot hole. We can pretend parents don't have a favorites but they do. Otherwise have to take my hat off, never seen some one predict this movies ending so early on. Some one clearly pays attention because info and clues were there from beginning. Most of us missed them.
They started months out and grew the corn for production. Afterwards they actually sold it for a profit!
fellow 90s kid here. love to find another Stargate fan in the wild. We are a rare breed lol.
Indeed
This is so weird because Brand must have been a teenager when Edmunds left on his mission. It was like that little girl obsession in the movie My Girl.
I believe the old man on the television screen speaking before you see old Murphy IS the brother but he must have died by the time Cooper arrived at the station.
The score. OMG the score.
The Dust Bowl commentary is from a Ken Burns documentary.