Interstellar 4K HDR IMAX | Into The Black Hole - Gargantua 1/2
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- Опубліковано 16 бер 2021
- #Interstellar #4K #Blackhole
Interstellar 4K HDR IMAX | Into The Black Hole 2160p 10bit HDR IMAX 5.1 DTS
Earth's future has been riddled by disasters, famines, and droughts. There is only one way to ensure mankind's survival: Interstellar travel. A newly discovered wormhole in the far reaches of our solar system allows a team of astronauts to go where no man has gone before, a planet that may have the right environment to sustain human life.
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Directed by : Christopher Nolan
Starring :
Matthew McConaughey
Anne Hathaway
Jessica Chastain
Bill Irwin
Ellen Burstyn
Michael Caine
Music by : Hans Zimmer
Produced by :
Emma Thomas
Christopher Nolan
Lynda Obst
Cinematography : Hoyte van Hoytema
Edited by : Lee Smith
Production
companies :
Paramount Pictures
Warner Bros. Pictures
Skydance Productions
Syncopy
Lynda Obst Productions
Distributed by :
Paramount Pictures
Warner Bros Pictures
Release date : October 26 2014
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Warner Bros Pictures /Syncopy 2014
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Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. - Фільми й анімація
Interesting fact: Christopher Nolan didn’t want to use CGI and actually flew Matthew and Anne to space and made them to fly into black hole.
Wow :0
Lets assume everyone understands the joke
@@aeugene7510 why did you have to ruin it-
@@aeugene7510 delete this comment
wow, he was really a visionary
Other people regret: missed opportunities
My regret : did not get to watch interstellar in theatres
Same buddy, but that’s Life and at least we are in this thogether
@@aakyi840 🤝
I'm sure they will program it again sometime before we die
@@LievenPluym i hope so.
Isn't that the same?
3:12 it's surprisingly accurate how the view of everything slowly shrinking into a single point behind you as you cross the event horison.
lol
Seen a lot of singularities in your rearview, have you? 😆
All they forgot was the red shift. It's insane how accurate it aas
@@arianna1906 it's literally science fiction it's as accurate as saying you turn into a unicorn if you fell into a black hole
@@escapetherace1943or maybe at that time it wasn't discovered yet?
@@tornadoreaper black holes do not exist.
-Born too late to explore earth.
-Born too early to explore space. -Born just in time to witness this masterpiece of a movie.
Born just in time for world dictatorship through global crony capitalism.
Interesting fact: Some individual frames within this scene of the black hole's effects took up to 100 hours to render, totalling altogether to around 800 terabytes of data for this scene.
Wow. I believe it.
useless information for me but thank you very much
@@golagaz how much time would have renderding take?
@@golagaz bruh bc its a real black hole not an effect
@@blackbaron6691 YOU never know
I can’t even imagine her shear level of loneliness the second he detaches, and the immense fear of going into the void, alone, with no other humans..
My guy fell into the black hole,literally death and you’re concerned about the woman 🤡
@@shahidkarim9910 😭😭😭
rah did your guy fall into the black hole like?!??
@@shahidkarim9910 lmaoooo
@@shahidkarim9910 bruh how do I like this comment more lol
Madness to think about how Professor Einstein imagined all this through mathematics. Truly the greatest genius this world has haver seen.
I can't even begin to imagine what someone would have to do in order to surpass Einstein. Then again they probably said that before him.
Tesla existed
Greatest mathematical genius. I hate when normies forget about logical genius, creative genius.
@@OrwellianDystopia1984 Einstein was bad at maths
He literally said that he focused on basic math but it was a big mistake so he made his good friend who was a mathematician do the tough math
He wasn't a mathematical genius
But he was a legendary physicist tho
@@OrwellianDystopia1984 how am I a normie for not mentioning “mathematical genius”. Ppl like you render these terms meaningless by using it in any context.
0:01
0:11
In case y'all are wondering why you can see the other side of the accretion disk on top and below the black hole, it's because the gravitational pull of the black hole is so great that it bends light to the point you can see the other side.
Hence, why their "little maneuver" costed them 51 years since gravity affects time aswell.
Not the gravity it is the speed at which they are going.
(only knowing special relativity)
Edit: I seem to have forgot about general relativity.
@@brad8122 no, in this case gravity is largely responsible for the time dilation.
Gravity at that strength literally squishes the fabric of space time@@brad8122
Awesome
this is so unrelated but omg Guardians Of Ga’hoole pfp and user??
Its just unbelievable that these things really exist...mind blowing.
I watched a video yesterday of a astrophysicist trying to explain what exactly a black hole is and how it is proven with quantum mechanics, it blew my mind.
@@ApexClips4k also neutron stars are just wtf...i really wanna see how a neutron star looks from near distance. So many amazing things out there in the universe...but we won't be able to see most of it
@@itsKNR have you read any of Neil Degrasse Tysons books ?
@@ApexClips4k no i am german. We have Harald Lesch he is like Neil Degrasse just in German LOL! He explains astrophysics in a simple way.
Actually we don't know if they really exist, I mean there's supposed photos or really straight up blurry photos that NASA showed or maybe it was from the telescopes., but this is all Einstein's theories, nor have we even been able to send anything into one where we wouldn't be able to gather data from it anyways, if they do exist it's scary to know that these exist, maybe they do, but I'm the type to keep an open mind I'm crazy enough to believe that we're in some sort of Matrix,. I don't believe that so hard to believe because honestly if we were in The Matrix we wouldn't even know what year we are actually in, we can be in the year 20 million and we wouldn't even know it, we're just some Lab Rats in some simulation thinking it's the year 2021
I’m impressed that he managed to keep his calm while falling towards the singularity
ikr. almost as if like it was a movie
@@veluta2549 hahahaha
Well ,he knew he had no hope, he just accepted what was happening.
That's almost infinite density ...
In reality he would've been stretched into a noodle long before
I went to see this in 2014 and I remember sitting in the theatre and realising, as it was happening, that I was witnessing something truly special, something that is very rare in cinema. I was moved to tears, which never happens to me, ever. This movie had such a profound effect on me then and 8 years later, it still has that same effect. I literally cannot wait to see Chris Nolan's film about the life of Robert Oppenheimer.
There is a before and an after this movie.
Here in 2023 to report that Oppenheimer does not disappoint.
@@kevinwilcox6943 amen to that!
What did you think of Oppenheimer? Surely you have seen it in the theatre as well?👀.
@@SliceOfLife93 yes, i had to see it in cinema, and not even in Imax (cuz my city has only 1 imax and it was STACKED) and the movie blew me away, the soundtracks, the visuals, not to mention the A+ acting...worth seeing it in cinema for sure!
As far as she knows, when Cooper detaches, she is literally the last human in existence. That level of loneliness would surpass even that of Romily and Dr. Mann. I always found it interesting when Mann says, “ pray you never learn how good it is to see another face,” because Romily knew exactly what that was like because of when he was alone on the ship. And with this scene, Brand would probably think that she’s the very last one without any chance that there would be someone left to see.
i wonder how many people realize how groundbreaking these visuals were. before this movie, black holes were portrayed as black whirlpools in space. after this movie, every single black hole depiction i see now looks like gargantua, with its gravitationally lensed accretion disk. i hope the filmmakers are proud of what they've done.
No they weren't, lol. Idiotic statement. We knew what black holes looked like from the 40s. The only people that thought they were "whirpools" in space were the uneducated, unwashed masses of simpletons
@@AverageAlien the world's leading scientist on black holes and gravity helped in the vfx, giving them the equations and algorithms to punch in for the gravitational lensing effects. When they started to plug in the numbers, they thought they made a mistake with what came out. It led to two papers getting published and was groundbreaking for understanding and visualizing the way the accretion disc appears to bend above and below the black hole from each perspective. You are literally seeing the other side of the accretion disc on the parts that arch over the top and bottom. Don't be so quick to judge. Look it up.
@@itsd0nk Then explain how an accurate image of a black hole was drawn decades before this movie
@@AverageAlien there wasn't. show your source. Before this movie everyone just drew a black circle
@@channawijetunga4089 agreed. ME2 had an impressive depiction during the final Collector Base battle and it was done before Interstellar. Interstellar was simply more successful in how many people saw it. That and the graphics in the movie were a lot better.
Imagine seeing your partner fall into a black hole just to see him years later in the same planet
Based
Wasnt she in love with wolf Edmund??
@@osamabinladenmybro4237 She is, but he dead 🤷
@@Zinuincarnate so she fell in love with cooper??
@@osamabinladenmybro4237 maybe not yet, but they obviously went through some shit together so they’ll probably end up together.
This is why I want Christopher Nolan to do more sci-fi movies! He gave us the most accurate visual of a black hole up to that point. His attention to technical detail while also focusing on the human emotion and drama is incredible.
this movie gave me a lot of feelings that I’d never felt before, or since, but the feeling of being so utterly, impossibly far from home is so insane. so insane
Agree my friend
well it's literally impossible and about as realistic as fantasy so don't get too wrapped around it
@@escapetherace1943 The possibility of wormholes haven't been ruled out, so not necessarily.
@@Beatyofeet32 they don't exist, blackholes don't exist, aliens do not exist
@@Beatyofeet32 The possibility of invisible faeries hasn't been ruled out either. This is all based on theory that abuses mathematics - nothing more. You can't apply pure math to a bunch of faulty assumptions and half-baked data to fulfill some physics fantasy. But that's exactly what theoretical physics is.
Falling into a black hole would honestly be the scariest shit ever to experience, because yes you would be stretched out, but still beforehand you’re falling into nothing, having no knowledge on what’s on the other side, or why exactly it’s happening
And when you scream your voice will change
Supermassive blackholes like this dont stretch you like that. Its different from normal black holes. But thats just theory
Doesn't matter. You won't survive it so falling into one means death.
@@largol33t1 not sure tho. Information is lost or conserved when falling into one and we can never observe someone passing the event horizon
@@largol33t1 so we cant know if ones dead or not (except smaller blackholes which stretch you to death surely)
Seeing this in Imax was one of the best decisions I ever made. I walked out of that theater feeling like I had an existential crisis though.
😹😹😹😹😹
"Like"?
I actually had one. 3h later and I was still not capable of speaking or answering to other people when they asked me at home: "How was it".
I talked about the movie for days. I went to the IMAX on the first night. Watched it in 70mm format.
And its goulagas.
This was hands down the most incredible theater experience I have ever been apart of. I feel like I pondered the mysteries of the universe for weeks after I saw this even though I know next to nothing about this stuff. The only movie to legitimately make me cry, I was a mess after this movie ended.
Interstellar is an extremely accurate scientific film for what's theoretically possible currently outside the event horizon. Something I learned recently in astrophysics is why we see actively consuming black holes like this with a ring that appears equatorial and another that appears polar. The polar ring actually does not exist but is what we would perceive if we were close enough to see it and we also observe the event horizon larger than what it actually appears.
The reason for this is that there's actually two "points of no return" in an orbit of a black hole. First one is anything with mass can orbit no closer than 3 Schwarzchild radii from the blackhole; the accretion disk. Light, because it does not have mass, can orbit no closer than 1.5 Schwarzchild radii from the black hole. This is important because the event horizon of the black hole is considered the outer edge from this Schwarzchild radius.
So the light that returns to your eye from this black hole actually comes from light that was able to escape from the the gravity of the black hole outside the photon sphere orbit of light. That being said, the light you don't observe can obvious be seen by contrast with the void. But you'd also actually see the opposite side of the black hole from the front because how the black hole warps space with gravity. So if you were to draw a black hole, dependent of the mass, you could draw rings inside the circle of what you perceive as the event horizon. Those rings starting from the center and going to the outer edges would get smaller as it reaches the edge and technically contain an infinite amount of sides of the black hole that you could see, getting smaller to the point of unconceivable.
When we are looking at the two accretion disks (the bright disks around the black hole), we are actually looking at one. The ring on "top" is actually the ring behind the black hole from the perspective of looking down at it. The ring on the "bottom" is actually the same point of the accretion disk you can see equatorially between you and the black hole but instead you are seeing it from the perspective of underneath it looking up.
When I think of this, I think about how relativity could apply to so much in relation to how we perceive gravity as Einstein theorized 106 years ago (1916). In how we would perceive black holes and their accretion disk, because the gravity from the black hole, what we see both doesn't exist how we see it and actually completely exists how we see it.
This breakdown is phenomenal Jeff. Just watched the movie for the first time Last night based on me studying Saturn and it’s influence on humanity with symbolism and traditions. Let’s just say this movie blew my mind and has kept me more intrigued into the idea of the principles of the universe with always be superior to any law of man. Godspeed on your endeavors and let’s keep expanding our horizon ☀️
@@saidit0nc366 thank you for your kind words. It's crazy to think that our knowledge of the unknown is expanding and with that presents a larger unknown. I just wish we weren't filled with so much greed. Rather than banding together as humankind, we are rushing to compete for wealth of how successful we are in science. If we started the space race as less of a race and more of an understanding that we as humans need to band together and become a multiplanetary species for the survival of humankind, we'd be so much further along. Prime example being that we have yet to put boots back on the moon in 50 years as of this year.
@@jeff4153 I completely agree with your point, being one whole consciousness as a species will be unstoppable because that would unlock all the mysterious pf the universe but also grant us the ability to manipulate on a whole another dimension. and love that we all think differently because I personally believe the moon landing was staged, due to the reason of the firmament. And they’re response to why they haven’t gone back is because they don’t have the same “technology” they had back in the day is quite a vague or non valid response. Plus how did Nixon communicate with the astronaut on the moon back in that time. But anywho great to know we are interested in expanding our knowledge of the unknown
probably the most intelligent comment I have ever read
@@b4bythebunny appreciated! Self taught on astrophysics. I can't afford a degree in that field.
The universe getting smaller behind him is so eerie.
The astronomy, the detail, the visualisation of this film was/is stupendous. It will hold up for many years definitely!
Maybe, but the physics wouldnt allow such a scene: alone the hard x-rays would kill any lifeform remotely close to the accretion disc. There's nothing possible but death for lifeforms near a blackhole.
@@dan7893 Of course but this is a sci-fi after all. He goes into a conceptual 4d space just afterwards which is primarily just made up stuff. There has to be some suspension of disbelief... otherwise the artistic aspects of the film are amazing!
@@dan7893 my guy it's *sci-fi* do you know what the "fi" means?
@@jom6987 fiction
@@dan7893 The whole point of this movie is that a far advanced civilization is preventing the actuality of what can happen when near a black hole… people here need to chill and look at the entire context before turning into Einsteins!
2:25 this scene becomes a lot funnier if you pretend that Dr. Brand is the one about to be detached. The swelling music and Coops almost sociopathic, emotionless response as she begs for her life is just *chefs kiss*
How love how the dialogue and acting work both ways
Pmsl
This made me crack up!
Like the ending of Life
Lmao
Props to the cameraman for getting so close to the black hole and making it back out alive, uploading it to youtube. Truly one of the cameraman moments of all time
No.
According to Paul Franklin, the process of creating the black hole shot took approximately two years. This included extensive research and development, as well as the actual creation of the visual effects. The team used a combination of practical effects, computer-generated imagery (CGI), and advanced physics simulations to accurately depict the behavior of a black hole.
The goal was to create a scientifically accurate representation of a black hole, which required understanding the physics and astrophysics involved. The team consulted with physicist Kip Thorne, who also served as a scientific consultant on the film, to ensure that the portrayal of the black hole was as realistic as possible.
IIRC, the digital model required hundreds of hours to produce with computers
Great analysis, but still isn’t it just a hole 😂😂
@@user-bb3rx7mh8k uhm, nope?
Falling into the blackhole is very realistic in this scene up to the point where the Ranger is hit by this particles. Especially to see the visible part of space disappering.
They forgot to add redshifting for the accretion disk and blushifting to the rest of the universe as we look behind, but nevertheless this is such a great scene
@@josebarria3233 Not to mention doppler shifting! But they still got 90% of it spot on.
Name of those particles?
Well space doesn't exactly disappear - What they are attempting to represent is that your view of the universe from within the event horizon is distorted because the light from that image would be gravitationally lensed (remember that at the event horizon of Gargantua, gravity is over 15,000 gees) and thus what would normally be viewed as regular 3-D space takes on the appearance of having been folded onto a two dimensional brane.
And it isn't that realistic, as they had to sacrifice much of that simply to fit the format of the film. For instance, the fact that they compressed what would take a lot of time, weeks or months, into a couple of minutes or less.
And they have to ignore that the boundary region contains a superheated plasma that would melt any metallic elements. So other than those types of things, this is a good representation of what falling into something SIMILAR to a black hole might be like.
The premise of the film is that Gargantua is a supermassive black hole, of 100M solar masses...and the event horizon alone, has the diameter of earth's orbit, roughly 300M km. And a "fall" down to the surface of the event horizon (aka the gravity funnel aka gravity well) is not just a straight path, but rather a series of increasingly smaller and faster orbits. Just a single orbit at the event horizon itself is almost a 1B km journey. And at a reasonable non-relativistic speed you can see how long this would take. Just accelerating to .3C from a typical rocket velocity of say 25,000 mph, takes a LONG time. Even at 2 gees this would take 53 days. And a 1B km orbit is many months of time at regular rocket speeds. Even at high terminal velocities approaching the event horizon - say you eventually got to a relativistic speed of .3 c - that final stable orbit will still take you over 2.5 hours. And that's just the lat orbit - before that you'd have had to make many larger orbits (at lower speeds).
Very realistic? . Know one has fallen or footage of what it would be in a black hole.
So if someone was watching this from far away they would actually see this scene take over 50 years in slow motion. That is madness.
You also have to take the distance in time into account. The further something is, the slower it seems, to the point were there are thing we have witnessed in space that took place millions of years ago but we are seeing now because of the distance. So i'd say if someone was looking at this from really far away, the ship wouldn't even be there.
Just as they see the outside world as moving more slowly.
@@ningyo5855 It's got nothing to do with distance whatsoever. Distance has absolutely zero effect on how fast or slow we see something happen
@@AverageAlien It takes time for the light to reach us from really far away. Any celestial object near to earth will barely have any time delay, while objects that are hundreds of light years away will have a much more considerable delay in their images, resulting in us looking at what happened hundreds of years ago instead of now.
@@ningyo5855 That doesn't mean things happen more slowly
just seeing the massive wallows of gas forming the accretion disc warping around the black hole’s event horizon, combined with the sheer size difference of the ship and the black hole…terrifying!
This movie was a visual spectacle and should've won an Oscar for best picture.
“See you on the other side, Coop.”
“See ya there, slick!” 🥺❤️
pardon my French but this movie blew my fucking mind in theaters. It was a legit adventurous experience. I honestly felt as if I had legitimately traveled through space and was actually exhausted by the end of the movie
I'm so jealous... I was stupid enough to give it a pass while it was in theaters. I regret it even since.
I saw it in Imax and felt like I had an existential crisis afterwards.
Well said 😁! I felt similar way.
The tesseract scene was totally mind blowing in the theatre.
Je t'excuse t'inquiète mon ami
The fact that the black hole is so theoretically and scientifically realistic, every frame you see took almost a hundred hour to make
0:22 best scene in the entire movie what a VFX 😢😭😭
"If you yell at 1100 decibals, you can create a small black hole!"
That one guy in my game:
That 9 year old kid is gonna create one after loosing in fortnight
@@shrodingerscat8940 Dude, there is one right next to me
Majin Buu trapped in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber
What's a decibal?
@@jordankyte9203 Unit of sound
Corridor Crew did a video with this scene where it was discussed that they VFX folks actually didn't know what the black hole render was going to look like before they did it. They worked with astrophysicists to get very complex physics equations to plug into the physics simulator or whatever they used to render it, and when it was done the studio people had to confirm with the physicists that they got an accurate image.
Short of the actual photograph of a black hole, this is the single most realistic depiction of a black hole to date, anywhere, because it was accomplished almost purely with mathematics. Well, the outside view is, anyway.
Great info !
It's even better to know that Gargantua in this film looks a lot like the black hole in the centre of the Milky Way too
Except for the colour of the accretion disk, which would be blue
" this little maneuver is gonna cost us 51 years. " -Joseph A. Cooper
such an epic line.
This movie changed my way of thinking, interests , and thought process.
Probably one of the best scenes in cinema history
Agreed
Absolutely
agree.
0:39-1:45 is just spectacular. The music especially is what makes it iconic.
Not at all. Just mere cgi depicting a black hole and ofc many things shown are wrong or inadequate. Only a normie would say that.
This is when you know you installed too many KSP mods
This KSP build sure looks advanced
**Flashbacks to when I was diving in a black hole while eating snacks**
Mod it until it breaks and then mod it to fix it
watching this on 2160p feels so real when i get a vr headset ill watch this video again
I love how before this movie was made, every popular depiction of black holes were weird and unnatural whirlpools floating in space, but after, the general public perception of black holes changed to a colossal and menacing black orb of doom, covered in ethereal rings of light, and capable of pushing the laws of physics to it's limits, both cooler and accurate, it's similar to how Jurassic Park changed the public view of dinosaurs from slow lumbering and stupid beasts to active, intelligent and magnificent creatures.
The horrifying thing is that, somewhere, hidden within the deepest folds of space, there could be some monstrous black hole like this. And we'd never know.
There is one at the centre of our own galaxy. It was photographed a few weeks ago.
The black hole called Ton-618 is around 66 billion solar masses, meaning it completely and absolutely dwarfs the solar system is size. As of now I think it’s the largest quasar ever found. It is slightly more massive than the Milky Way galaxy, which is 64 billion solar masses. I’d say this is nowhere near the theoretical limit for a black hole’s size and mass, which to me is absolutely crazy considering how massive it is.
I mean, seeing as it is far away by a few billion light years or sth, means it’s most likely much larger by now.
The fact that black holes even are a thing is already horrifying
this black hole is actually quite tiny compared to some
2001 A Space Odyssey is looked at more as a piece of art. Interstellar is going to be remembered as an experience. Literally every aspect of this movie, whether its the acting, direction, cinematography, the editing, the sound design, THE MUSIC, set design, and writing(debatable)...is firing on all cylinders. It represents the peak of filmmaking. It also has 2 scenes that I think will go down in history as some of the greatest scenes put on film; watching his children’s messages scene and the docking sequence.
I remember seeing this movie in IMAX on the first day of release, planned it perfectly to make sure i got there early to get center seats and not too close to the screen. Right after Cooper pleads to Dr. Mann not to dock and then Mann blew himself up, Cooper accelerates towards the Endurance and Dr. Brandt then asks Cooper what he's doing, and he just says..."docking" (Cue Hanz Zimmer's score). I lost my shit in the theater, I got goosebumps and literally leaned forward and audibly said pretty loudly "what...the...fuck!?!". As the scene went on I remember thinking, Nolan... you crazy bastard , you just cranked the intensity up to a 10. Then the music tipped it over to an 11. That moment, that sequence with that music and the sound just blasting. Sensory Overload...I will never forget the experience.
Seriously, if you sat down and really thought about "what" this movie is about, like really thought about all its themes, all its layers of depth and what its trying to say, your gonna come to only one conclusion. Its about Everything.
I think they're both phenomenal for different reasons. 2001 is more about the inherent wonder of the unknown, whereas Interstellar is more about the potential future and wonder of humanity and life through space. 2001 is less focused on the humans, Insterstellar moreso. It's a personal preference thing ultimately.
2001 is extremely overrated because of who directed it.
This movie was amazing. I watched it at home but still got goosebumps. I was sweating and cold under the blanket at the end of it. And I like the spacey things and take photos of that stuff cause it's so interesting. So I was gonna love it. But I didn't know it would be that good. Held in my pee for the whole thing. It was that good.
it's a simple paradox and a stretched out over explanation and waste of time; imo. Stunning visuals tho, but other than that, just another stupid paradox to blow the minds of simpletons. imo
Both films are amazing experiences for different reasons.
the amount of anxiety and nervousness I felt watching this in theaters because I didn't expect for the story to go this far. (when I should have expected anything because of Murphy's law). have only had this feeling very very few times and this was the first time I ever felt that
What an absolute masterpiece 👌
2:23 I promised myself I wouldn't cry.
I laughted
@@alejotassile6441 you monster 😂
51 years in less than a minute insane
They depicted the black hole with 100% accuracy
I mean on the outside. Probably not the inside seeing as we don’t know what the insides look like
98% accuracy, apparantly the real black hole would have been blue but they made it yellow to better communicate that it was a black hole.
Didn't include gravitational redshift. Plus, the light from the accretion disk would be way, way, way brighter than you see here. But the gravitational lensing part was pretty much spot on, I believe.
This looks like a stellar mass black hole and that accretion disk would be HOT they would die long before they approached it
Wdym 'they'? Gravitational lensing had been discovered in 1980s and the movie came out in 2014. The movie just used some models as to how black holes would look and just used CGI to make it look better.
The first few seconds when he's looking in awe at Gargantua is amazing its the most destructive terrifying thing in the universe and he's going into it and he knows it Jesus!
0:23 Props to the cameraman/drone controller for keeping up with them.
Lmao
this is absolutely sending me lmfaooo
it's actually Christoffer Nolan behind them holding an IMAX camera
That was actually me recording with my phone
Lol
This isn’t an artists interpretation of a black hole but actually a simulation using Einstein’s theory of what a black hole would look like if you were to see it - fascinating stuff
When you watch it back, you hear TARS say "See you on the other side Coop." and Cooper say "See you there Slick.". Like Dr. Brand, you don't catch it the first time, but they literally gave away the twist of Cooper detaching.
“Cooper entering into the black hole”
The most exciting moment in the world
1:05 whatever text that person sent must’ve been funny
lmao
LM-AO
LMAO1 🤣
LMAO
TARS?
It literally gave me tears and goosebumps 🤎 Well shot product !! Kudos to the entire team behind this scene.
This movie is definition of science fiction
The feeling of his breathing while he’s falling in the blackhole still gives me goosebumps from the time I saw it cinema when it came out this whole movie is a masterpiece
Exactly how i breathe during sleep paralysis.
Fact:
This clip is 4 minutes and 33 seconds, but it actually took me 7 years to watch...
Hahaha
this is the most calming music while falling into a black hole
This is suuuuuuuuuch a good movie and I can’t emphasize that enough.
reminder, that this was the first truly accurate scene of a black hole, it might be what it would look like if one were to look at it in real life
scientists also found out thanks to Interstellar that black holes are slightly concave on one side and have a bulge on the other
I'm not here to disagree or anything but what about spaghettification that most seem to agree on they totally just bypass that here? How's the guy even alive after going through a black hole lol. To me all this is just pure science fiction. We cannot go to space.
@what I can't say I understand why but okay
@what that's really cool okay. So because it was a big one he was able to go through it unharmed theoretically?
This guy explains really well how a black hole would look like in reality ua-cam.com/video/4rTv9wvvat8/v-deo.html
@@TheDivineCallingofJesusChrist Its a supermassive black hole it's not near the size of a supermassive black hole but that would be impossible to render so it's made to be one and in a supermassive black hole you don't get spaghettified
When Cooper says, " Ranger 2...Prepare to detach..." and that music swells up, well THAT is one incredible, heartbreaking cinematic moment!
"Don't..."
It kills me every time. Anne Hathaway delivers that little innocuous line and it shatters my heart imagining Dr. Brand's realization and dread. This is probably one of the best scenes in any media ever produced. It's so good.
It’s amazing to think that, because of the time dilation, he probably was millions of years into the future near the singularity 🤯
One of the most intense scenes of all time. Imagine being there.... all alone.....
Unknowable feeling
I have never seen such a magnificent scene in the cinema
Before this movie i used to be scared of space because of creepy aliens(news channels used to show aliens as creepy). But after watching this movie specially this whole scene made me fall in love with space. Just loving it. After this i started taking interest in space related things (articles,books,images,videos)
Cringe
It's actually beautiful.. but what's more scarier is the ocean lmao
@@BananaRama1312 no
@@BananaRama1312 nothing is more based than being cringe so yes dude is cringe and thats great.
yes you should be scared of aliens, because if there's an alien than this probably means that we didn't reach the hardest part of evolution and an great extinction is probably near
Greatest movie of all times for me! This is the only movie i bought in 4k HDR version.
Matthew McConahey's finest performance... In a masterpiece movie.
I've always liked to imagine this is his actual last moments, and everything else we see in the film is nothing but a massive DMT hit dropped by his brain in those terror moments right as he's torn apart.
That’s… kinda dark
Bruh
But Murphy's books actually fell though. How do you explain that if it was all in his mind?
@@legendarypussydestroyer6943 All part of the massive hallucination. xD
Seriously though I know thats not what happens, just find it funny to imagine.
@@supremeownage8995 But the movie said it happened
The cameraman is underrated he flew out of the spaceship and filmed outside of it,what a legend
Probably is captain marvel
Fuck. Stop with that shit, it stopped being funny 5 years ago.
Looking back at this scene makes me even more impressed with Mass Effect 2 and their visualization of a Black Hole.
The black hole is so realistic that every 1 second it takes 100 hours to render
2:08 I always love how you can she is trying to understand TARS statement.
I didn't notice it at first because "see you on the other side" can be interpreted two ways but oh my god that's what TARS meant.. Damn... That's crazy.
Please help me understand I don’t understand what he meant?
@@smithjimmypantz3228 Hearing "See you on the other side" is giving Dr. Brand just an inkling of suspicion if Cooper plans on joining him since as far as they initially agreed Cooper was not also dropping into the black hole with TARS
@@Kreekakon ohhh I get it
yo my dude should never be afraid of a roller coaster again
This movie make us feel so tiny in this universe. Such a masterpiece.
Christopher Nolan the only human to survive intense radiation from a black hole.
How it feels to have your first kiss.
It's not that great
How it feels to chew 5 gum.
My first kiss gave me mouth aids
Corny
I love how they portrayed TARS and CASE with different personalities and voices, rather than being emotionless ai.
when he said newton 3rd law, you got to leave something behind... I cried
Now that’s a perfectly cut scream
What gives this scene the most intensity is the soundtrack by Hanz Zimmer. Incredible.
even T.A.R.S died makes brand sad, imagine how lonely they felt out there
TARS survived and was found after cooper has been returned to the wormhole
First watched Interstellar in 2015, still find this movie fascinating!
Talk about putting your money in the right hands. I don't think we're gonna have a high class sci-fi movie as immersive as interstellar.
One of the best movie scenes ever to watch in cinema. The visuals are so mindblowing and the music
Imagine being the only person to enter a black hole and survive! Makes landing on the moon look like child’s play.
*Honestly if Christopher Nolan said he went to space and got this footage I would've believed him*
We agreed 90% is the best line in this movie
It's what I find fascinating about life and the universe in general. We really don't know everything about it. Even after hundred thousands of years of evolution. Just now we are trying to grasp the scope of it.
This movie just made me cry but at the same time be in awe. We as humans are so insignificant. The universe doesn't care about us. We are but specs of dust.
Greatest movie of all time for a reason.
Its really cool how they even showed the gravitational red shift when he fall into the black hole.
First saw this film stoned out my head on release. Only movie to ever have me sit up and literally have me speechless. Rewatched it once the credits rolled.
Cameraman with another astronaut survived.
Fact: Before Interstellar no image of a black hole was available, there were only scientific equations to predict how it looks untill Christopher Nolan created a black hole using VFX by actually discussing with the physicists and refering to the equations of black hole. And he showed this is how a black hole would look like according to the equations. And the fact is that apart from the model scientists also discovered new things about black hole from this model of black hole.
This is my most memorable scene 👩🏻🚀
I watched this on my oculus. Haven’t seen this in such glory since I saw this in IMAX 70mm. Thank you, please continue with the great uploads and scenes!
If you didn’t see this in iMax; you missed out.
I went on a whim. Never saw a trailer or promo. Completely clean slate with some friends. One of the best decisions I ever made.
Doctor : u have just 5 minutes
What u want..
Me : play this video. .😅
😮😊
seeing this at imax in sydney was incredible hands down the best cinema experience ever
I loved the “learned from the master” quote really humanized both robots