And Ellen Burstyn's near-last line was "Our new sun....Our new world". Implying that ALL the space stations would go through the wormhole, and All of remaining humanity would go to populate Edmunds planet. ["Pods" had no comment] XD
@@anorthositeI dont think it means that. It’s a comment talking with the assumption that Brand’s planet is the last one of humanity. If Cooper hadnt entered the tesseract (which wasnt part of the plan) Brand would be the last person in the universe so it would be “our new home”.
When she said 'no parent should have to watch their own child die' she was speaking from experience, because she saw what it did to her brother. This movie breaks my heart every time.
@@kvm6you missed the crux of the film. brand’s entire speech about love being able to transcend time and space - and she ended up being right. it doesn’t matter if they havent spoken in decades. it doesn’t matter if they havent seen each other since she was a child. that love held and carried on.
Best Nolan movie for me just because of the sheer ambition. This one deals with themes even the smartest people on the planet are only beginning to understand. Woven into a father-daughter relationship of which there are far too few in this day and age. One of the greatest movies of all time IMO.
I know I am in the vast minority but I think Interstellar is typical movie-movie. It starts out really strong but eventually goes for hard drama, fast pace, won't let scenes and story breathe, emotional drama where love is the ultimate force in the universe. I like it but I also think it is overestimated and over hyped because of the concept and idea but not the actual story. It is for 2/3 a really good sci-fi movie with the third act throwing away the science in sci-fi. I think it's a popcorn movie for people who think they are smarter than they are (I don't mean that as an insult, I am not very smart myself).
@@Battouga You should probably read Kip Thorne's "The Science of Interstellar", where he explains how much of the movie (almost the whole movie) is either scientifically accurate, or at worst, plausible from the current scientific knowledge viewpoint. It also helps that Kip Thorne himself came up with most of the science depicted in the movie. While the last section is still more fiction than science, it is still very much in line with the currently accepted scientific body of knowledge.
@@Battouga It's hard to take you seriously when you say that 1/3 of it is a typical movie because it IS a movie. From the start, to the middle and down to the end, there's always been drama to the film. People don't watch a sci-fi movie thinking "I need the entire film to be 100% accurate to the science", this ain't a documentary or actual REAL science. What, you like the wormhole concept but you didn't like the tesseract on the 3rd act? They're both not real 😂 Also, the film runs for 2h 49m, I have no idea why you think the film was face paced or that it wasn't letting scenes and the story breathe.
@@rexarsenio9447 I understand it's hard for you to take me seriously when you didn't really comprehend what I wrote, willfully or subconsciously. Yes, I know it is a movie, that wasn't my point at all. I called it a movie-movie, a popcorn movie where things are exaggerated beyond the suspension of disbelief but it's entertaining. I didn't argue that a sci-fi movies have to be accurate to science and it's weird you are bringing it up. Like this movie is part of your personality or something and I just offended you. Very weird. The only times the movie breathes a little is when we are back on Earth, following the science team/Murphy but everything comes down to a figurative ticking clock. While in the space-plot it feels rushed because some scenes were convoluted and unnecessary. This is all just my opinion and I have no problem with people loving Interstellar but please, atleast try to be honest with why you think I am wrong instead of making up arguments. I was just disapointed by the third act and I don't agree it's this cinematic masterpiece some people hold it up to be.
This movie still holds the best scene ever for me. The black hole in IMAX with all the sound around you, all the rumble and the size of it. It was mind blowing.
"It's not possible!" "No, it's necessary" will forever remain an iconic moment paired up with one of the best soundtracks (No Time for Caution) of all time.
@@LtDan-rk4si I saw Interstellar when it came out and I can't tell you what a cerebral experience it was. If we are talking about some of my favorites Nolan movie moments paired up with awesome soundtracks, then: 1) The Dark Knight ending with Gary Oldman narration and soundtrack by the wizard Hans Zimmer 2) Oppenheimer imagining and wondering about the scientific discoveries in the environment around us paired up with "Can you Hear the Music" soundtrack is another favorite of mine now And many more...
Yeah exactly. I'm a space enthusiast and a big physics lover, i decided to watch this movie because of space and physics but after i finish, what i love the most is the beautiful father and daughter relationship.
@@aniqalam8231the relationship between Cooper and Murphy is my favorite part of this movie. The fact Cooper was saved and taken back to Earth/Cooper Station just moments before Murphy dies and Murphy decided and wanted Cooper to help Brand repopulate the human race is so heartbreaking and powerful at the same time. Murphy in my opinion wasn’t looking out for herself, she was looking out for humanity even in her dying moments Murphy didn’t want Cooper to stay on Cooper Station, she wanted Cooper to go help Brand even after Cooper was absent throughout Murphy’s adult and elderly years.
On the first watch, it was a masterpiece of a sci-fi movie. But when you become a parent and rewatching this, you realize Interstellar is actually a story of a parent and their kid. It breaks your heart in new ways you didn't knew were possible.
So true. I re-watched this movie this Tuesday after having just dropped my daughter off for her freshman year of University this past weekend. The messages he gets from his kids when the 23 years elapsed had extra impact for me. I was weeping like a baby.
@@iRunfastXC People who rip on the science of the movie just don't understand the science lmao; it checks out pretty much across the board. The only place where it gets questionable is the Tesseract, but that's a non-issue because we have no idea what happens in the singularity... Physicists even hypothesize it leads to a higher dimension, which is exactly what happens in the film.
Some people can get cynical over this movie. Yes, there are preposterous elements. Yes, there's a lot of emotional moments. But isn't that what movies are? To make you think and yes, even feel something over imagined concepts whether it be pure fiction or based on real events. Absolutely loved the usage of fact based science mixed in with creative freedom/theory and throwing in a lot of heart as well. I'm glad Nolan swung for the fences on this.
Movies don't need to be totally realistic fully as long as it makes sense for the movie plot. That is what the movie did well, only thing I don't like that much is the 5th dimensional thing that happened, but that is the way how the daughter got the information + Matthew's character should have died to bring realistic ending and he was hailed as hero for bringing the information to his daughter. Just my own small opinion. Still love this version too.
What do you mean? It's an incredibly realistic movie. There are only a tiny number of visuals that are dramatized, like what it would look like coming through a wormhole, but other than that this movie is like 99% scientifically accurate. My only gripe with this movie is why they ever decided to go to Miller's planet in the first place. A planet with such extreme time dilation would be an absolute no-go, regardless if it got a thumbs up from Miller.
@@thamor4746 I didn't like the 5th dimension part on my first viewing but it's really grown on me since then. I do think it makes sense that beings who have evolved to harness gravity to the point where they experience time as a physical dimension might be able to craft something like that for Coop to allow him to communicate with the past. Heck, why not?
@ohedd yah idk what they are talking about. I'm an engineering unit in college and both all of my physics professors love this movie and often use it as examples. The way they get artifical gravity in space, how a the gravity of a black hole can mess with time, to the 3D rendering of the black hole which was created by legit physicists. They hate how they explain newton's law tho.
For me, this was Nolan's best, probably will ever be. So many legendary scenes: "not a mountain, it's a wave!", "not possible, it's necessary!", the scene where Cooper sees his family age decades in the space of a few minutes' video, that freaking wormhole, that black hole Gargantua, the Tesseract. Saw it in IMAX at the theatre when it released: truly a moviegoing experience like no other!! Unbelievable it's been nearly 10 years now!
Fun fact #1: The dust storm in and around 4:35 is made out of actual dust, and not VFX. The crew used large fans to blow cellulose dust into the scene, while the actors walked through the dust. That's why it seemed so realistic. 7:33 Many scientists said that this piece was phrased wrong. The major problem with Blight is not the fact that it would deplete oxygen, but rather the fact that the respiration of blight would replace the oxygen in the air with carbon dioxide. Some of them showed calculations, where they said that a planet-scale blight would deplete the oxygen in the atmosphere by just 1-2 percent which is survivable. The bigger issue is that all that 1-2% of the atmosphere would be replaced by Carbon Dioxide, which would surge up from its present quantity of 0.03% to around 1-2%. This would cause toxic reactions with the respiratory systems of most animals, causing extinctions. Fun Fact #2: The interiors of the Endurance (where the actors did their scenes) were built to actual scale. They did build only 3 modules, but all the interiors from the LCD monitors, the seats, the boards, everything was a physical set property. Also, the great scientist Neil DeGrasse Tyson has a great thing to say about sponsoring space exploration and space research. He said, "If we can figure out a way to turn Mars into Earth, we can figure out a way to turn Earth into Earth." This means that we could repair our own planet if we figure out the mechanics of planetary evolution.
*Interstellar is one of the greatest sci-fi films ever made.* This movie genuinely contributed to the scientific community, they actually got 2 research papers published about this. When Christopher Nolan was working on this movie rather than have an “artist’s concept” of what a black hole would look like he worked with a physicist named Kip Thorne and asked him how black holes work. So Kip gave him a bunch of maths, they sent the math to the VFX team, they put it in their render engine (which is far more powerful and expensive than anything that exists in the community) and what it produced was completely unexpected. They knew that a black hole would have what’s known as an accretion disc, but what they didn’t expect as this weird halo effect around it. The VFX team thought it was a bug so they sent it to Kip and he both confirmed that that’s what it would look like and was surprised on how well it looked. This is what a black hole would look like because the gravity is so powerful that it’s pulling light from the other side and causing you to see a second halo because you are seeing the other side of the black hole. And the time dilation is 100% accurate. If you are near something with a strong gravitational pull like a planet larger than earth or a black hole your “clock”, meaning your time, will run slower than on earth. I’m still surprised that 8 years later no one else has used that in a sci-fi movie or tv show. As for the movie itself, it is one of the most emotionally powerful and emotionally draining movies I have ever experienced. The scene of Cooper saying goodbye to his daughter before he leaves always makes me tear up, but when he sees the video messages from his children and sees how they have grown up over the past 23 years, I breakdown in tears and ugly cry just like McConaughy!
@@kvm6Incorrect, you haven't actually looked into it apparently, just going off of a half full set of information. Gargantua (the black hole) would not spaghettify you right away--as even without the intervention of the film's 5th dimensional humans (which is who kept Cooper safe when he ejected in the black hole)--he would not be "spaghettified" in Gargantua, due to it being so ridiculously large, as well as a "gentle singularity". This means the black hole is so big, and it is rotating so fast, that it is at a high enough velocity to NOT cause spaghettification. In a standard black hole you would be correct, but the kind that Gargantua is would not cause that to happen. Gargantua is so massively huge that the change from "not bent" at the event horizon to the "very bent" matter at the singularity is very gradual, so it would not lead to instant spaghettification. However if it wasn't for the 5th dimensional beings keeping him safe and guiding him to their tesseract. obviously Cooper would have eventually been destroyed due to the aheer tidal forces, as he continued into the black hole. But the sheer size and velocity of it would prevent it for a relatively long time, so you would definitely have plenty of time to have an existential crisis before you are infinitely crushed lol
@@KrazzeeKane With you starting soo strongly in your reply, I wished it was satisfactory... Coop falls in quite far. If he's fallen past Photon sphere (which we see happening) he can't make it out of the black hole with any physics help. Not only that, black holes aren't worm holes. The closest would be showing a White hole (theorized to exist mathematically) which pops him out near Saturn in end. In my version of the movie, Coop would have sent the message to Murph and then just died.
This doesn't seem to be 100% right. Logic itself should tell you this doesn't track: "they didn’t expect as this weird halo effect around it. The VFX team thought it was a bug so they sent it to Kip and he both confirmed that that’s what it would look like". How could they confirm it to be accurate if the image was so surprising? Wouldn't it require further study if the results were unanticipated? The effect I believe you are describing is gravitational lensing, and an "Einstein Ring" (the halo) which is an old concept (first anticipated by Einstein in 1912). More important though, are "caustics" (a concept in optics) caused by a rotating black hole, sometimes called "creases" in spacetime created by the black hole's spin. This is not entirely new, either. The Interstellar paper references an earlier paper in 1994 by Blanford and Rauch, along with other papers in 2008 and 2010. The main difference is no one had placed a camera near to a black hole in their simulations/renders. From the Interstellar paper: "These papers' caustics are relevant for a source near the black hole and an observer far away, on Earth-in effect, on the black hole's 'celestial sphere' at radius $r=\infty $. In our paper, by contrast, we are interested in light sources that are usually on the celestial sphere and an observer or camera near the black hole. For this reversed case, we shall discuss the relevant caustics in sections 3.3 and 3.4. This case has been little studied, as it is of primarily cultural interest ('everyone' wants to know what it would look like to live near a black hole, but nobody expects to make such observations in his or her lifetime), and of science-fiction interest." It is an interesting case, but perhaps not so much to astrophysicists. I doubt it was as "unexpected" as you claim, and it is of little use, as we can't get close enough to confirm anything predicted by simulations. The biggest contribution was the software used to produce these images: "Our ray-bundle techniques were crucial for achieving IMAX-quality smoothness without flickering; and they differ from physicists' image-generation techniques (which generally rely on individual light rays rather than ray bundles), and also differ from techniques previously used in the film industry's CGI community." Indeed, Kip Thorne seems to care about this more-so than any "discoveries" made using the film's technology: "Has working in films helped your own research? Kip S. Thorne: In small ways but not major ways... Oliver James, who is the chief scientist at Double Negative, and I worked out this new method to do it which was necessary because you could not get the high resolution smooth images that were required for this science fiction movie in any other way. But the methods that we devised are now being used by astrophysicists as part of their visualization of simulations... So there is a feedback in that sense but I think beyond that the direction of the feeding is largely from the science into the film and through that to a popular culture."
No other film is able to encapsulate and blend real science, adventure, drama and humor with world class acting, cutting edge cinematography, an all time soundtrack, and iron clad plot the way that this movie can. In my opinion it is truly the greatest movie of all time.
Interstellar and Arrival are two of my most favorite pure Scie Fi movies ever. I am not talking about Action Sci Fi. This movie is pure drama, scale and such huge heart. Jessica's character is so short and yet so much heartfelt and has layers to it and every single actor has just killed it. It breaks me every time I watch like it broke Kristen. People bring up The dark knight when they talk about Nolan movies but for me this is his best work and I don't think even he can top this (atleast for me).
A lot of people get thrown by the climax inside the black hole. The construct is a three-dimensional representation of fifth-dimensional space-time. In theoretical physics, the fifth dimension is essentially the three dimensions of physical space and the fourth dimension of time all crammed together - infinite space-time. The only way to feasibly experience the fifth dimension is in a place where the force of gravity is so powerful that it can go backwards through time, like inside a black hole. It's all theoretical of course, since no one has ever been inside of a black hole. Who created that construct inside the black hole? Future humans who survived Earth's demise, populated the universe via interstellar travel, and eventually evolved to live in the fifth dimension, beyond the restraints of time and space as we know them. There's a little causal looping happening here, as these fifth-dimensional humans of the future are lending a hand to their ancestors in the past to make sure humanity manages to achieve interstellar travel and leave Earth, therefore insuring their own existence. But as fifth-dimensional beings, they've evolved to become almost godlike in nature. They can't simply tell their three-dimensional ancestors like Cooper where to go and what to do. It would be like one of us trying to talk to an ant. However, they can leave hints and clues to follow like the wormhole near Saturn and the black hole construct in order to guide them toward what they need.
Yes, perfect explanation ❤ I wonder if it's a time-loop, and we always reached back to help ourselves. Lol like, time never really changed, we deus ex machinated ourselves always. The wormhole existing proved we survived. It's like an exercise in free will vs prophecy, kinda.❤
That was the bulk or hyperspace? Being the 5th dimension? Basically a dimension that is impossible for the current gen to access but basically the 3 and 4 dimension operate on top of it. Crazy to think about
"Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends dimensions of time and space. Maybe we should trust that, even if we can't understand it." Powerful stuff, for all its amazing science this movie is about love transcending all of that.
Seen this film lots of times but just found out recently that every tick on the wave planet represents a day passing on earth still blowing my mind all these years later
This is my favorite movie of all time and makes me cry on every single watch. So glad whenever I get to see someone experience it for the first time. Glad y'all enjoyed it!
This is one of the top 3 movies I watched in my life so far. This movie's background score is so haunting, I hear it in my mind whenever I just think of this movie.
This has become my favorite movie of all time. The story telling, the emotions, the cinematography are the best. I remind my kids at times to never give up hope and remember the docking the scene like Cooper never gave up hope of docking the ship in what seemed like an impossible situation.
They just about melted a super computer trying to render that black hole in 3D. It`s so well done that the international scientific body uses it as the definitive depiction of a black hole!
18:47 the planet has higher gravity than earths, and he was running for a long time, he was tired and panting from that and also in shock of what was happening while also letting the other two get in first, that’s why he took long
She was so PISSED at Doyle for not getting in the ship when he had plenty of time! 😂 That gave me a good laugh because that's exactly how my girlfriend reacted in the theater when we first saw this. BTW: This is being re-released in theaters in September 2024 in 70mm IMAX. I HIGHLY recommend seeing it if you get the chance. It really is an experience. I've seen many movies in IMAX, but this one was just in another level from anything else I've ever watched in that format. My girlfriend was actually starting to feel an almost motion-like sickness, because you really feel like you are there.
IMO Doyle kept the door clear; because Brand's survival was the most important for Humanity. Knew that he had already exhausted himself from the increased gravity
My favorite Nolan film and in my top 10 favorite movies of all time. The story, the soundtrack, the visuals - all were fantastic. If you really want your mind blown read the story about how Zimmer came up with the soundtrack.
Loved the reaction, I personally enjoyed a lot the film but the music… Oh my, Hans Zimmer did the best soundtrack I have ever heard. FYI: Zimmer was told that he could create this music as he wished, he wasn’t even told that it was a space-related movie but a story of a father and son, so he ended up making this music thinking about his son. 🫶🫶
Great reaction! This movie is not just a Nolan achievement, the theoretical physics and advisors that Nolan got to make a real scientific movies has never been done. These Physicists wrote a scientific paper about black holes from the time working in this movie, that we can see in the movie about Gargantua. From dust clouds being real and not CGI, to Nolan buying acres of land to grow corn for the shots, building real scale endurance, the time effects from space travel, this movie is still a masterpiece of cinema….. yes even with its few scientific flaws, the gains are more prominent. Loved the movie in the IMAX screen and was amazed; now I love it even more watching it with my daughter while holding her very close every time
Loved this reaction! I think Nolan should have explained more about relativity for people because 99% of reactors don't understand what's going on. I've also seen a lot of reactors say you'd get more done with a 67-hour day on that planet but it just means there's more light and more night. You're still human. You still need to sleep. If you moved there, you couldn't suddenly stay awake normally for 67 hours.
Yea I was thinking that, obviously it's just the planets rotation that causes day/night cycles, I don't know how the human circadian rhythm would adapt to that, would probably have to be artificial ways to do it.
I just watched this movie some days ago and it is perfect! The soundtrack, the acting and the storyline is insane to me. And I don't necessarily mean all the space stuff going on. It definitely elevates it. I'm not a father and I'm no where near to be one but Murphys pain in some way feels relatable and Coopers decision as well. I think most humans would rather travel to the end of the universe for their kids if theres the tiniest chance to save their kids and when Cooper finally sees the videos of their kids 23 years after theyve sent them, crying in deep agony, regret and fear with probably almost no hope left felt so true
Awww ... Seeing my Andrew shed a tears like that is broke my heart 😭😭😭❤❤❤. I'm so glad watching this at the cinema, very very spectacular 🏆🏆🏆 just amazing ‼️
Interstellar on imax is to this day my fav cinematic experience (even better than Infinity War & EndGame). My only regret is not seeing Inception & The Dark Knight in the theater as well
One of my all time favorite films. I don't trust anybody who doesn't cry during the message scene. So...I now find you both trustworthy...especially you Kristen! :)
I love this movie, two movies I never get tired of watching. Home Alone, childhood movie and Interstellar, ever since a kid I was fascinated with space. I’d have books about nuclear astrophysics. This movie has to be my favorite.
Nolan’s most openly emotional film, he fully lived up to his “Stanley Kubrick’s eye and Steven Spielberg’s heart” identity with this grand sci-fi epic about the sheer force of will that we have for those we love.
People always remember the FIGHT OR FLIGHT RESPONSE... but there is also the FREEZE response... the poor man froze in whatever was happening to him... loved this movie!
I Watched this movie with my father more than 110 times and every time, when i watch it makes me chill like how the heck they shot this scene and the emotions are purely blessed one. man background score ufff like i can listen to it..till i die
When they land on the ocean planet you can hear the soundtrack composed of rhythmic "ticks" every 1.25 seconds. Since every hour on the planet corresponds to seven years on Earth with a quick calculation it can be understood that each "tick" corresponds to an entire day spent on Earth. I hope the comment is understandable, your fan from Italy.
I suck at emotions and can rarely feel them, but this film is the only way I ever really feel anything. I just wish and hope I can feel the connection the characters have to their family members and partners. I always relate to the character that dies on the first planet, forgotten, overwhelmed by the waves, and never having a connection to others. Favorite movie of all time.
Hopefully one day Kristen and Achara can watch “The Longest Week.” It’s a romantic and witty, slow Sunday kind of film. Starring Jason Bateman and Olivia Wilde.
I can never get tired of this movie. Watched it earlier this year. I watched any reaction that pops up on my YT feed. I didn't catch that it was Murph in the beginning. So when they showed her at the end, I literally balled my eyes out. As a parent that would have killed me to see my child so old. This is such a beautifully done movie.
I watched this movie in theaters. And I just couldn't believe how amazing it was. I wanted more of this movie . i wanted it to not be over . Amazing Hust amazing . Docking scene was Fantabulous.
Give Kristen a huge for us lol. It's hard seeing such a bubbly person crying. Nolan hit us all in the gut during the video playback scene. The conversation at the end always gets me. "Because my dad promised me."
Saw it twice in the theater, didn't notice the lady in the beginning was Murph. When I saw it the second time, even more amazing. Well spent 6+ hours. The science was mostly real (black hole would be a sphere, no sound in space). Neat (lack of better word) that the good things could happen (to a degree) but also scary the bad stuff is a possibility.
I always wonder how this plays for those who missed it on IMAX, and I'm glad to see it still hits powerfully. Not all sci fi movies meant for the big screen can do that
The father-daughter scene at the end probably made 99% of people cry. It is the sad true about relativity. If we ever are able to travel great distances at high speeds, whoever decides to go, better have nobody left on Earth, because it will be the last time they see them most likely.
I watched that movie a year after it released and I am not lying after that much of time it still my favourite movie. I have a lot of knowledge about those space-time theories so that movie makes a place in my heart at the time of first watch.
Excellent film but still prefer Inception. Inception is absolute cinematic perfection and every scene feels iconic. Interstellar is presents us with enormous concepts - wormholes, the concept of gravity/time ("Every hour we spend on that planet will be seven years on Earth..." WTAF?!), types of planet (i.e. covered entirely in water, another completely in ice)
Seemed like this really hit home. For another incredible sci-fi movie with very similar themes, check out Arrival with Amy Adams. It's another masterpiece, this time by Denis Villeneuve. Possibly my favorite movie of all time (btw, Interstellar is top 5 for me).
I’ve seen every Christopher Nolan film. I love Inception and The Prestige and several others but this one just might be my favorite. The emotion is off the charts, and I’m here for it. ✌️
You didn't include the most important line of the movie. "Because my dad promised me." This is the best daddy -daughter movie of all time
Probably cause she bursted into tears right there, I noticed now 😂 best space movie
@@MiKo97100isn’t that the whole point of doing a reaction?
also "It's not possible. No, it's necessary!"
Was gonna watch this video, saw this comment, decided i ain't watching it.
@@pirateeagleofficialsame
Guys you didn't notice Brand removed her helmet.
She found the correct planet.
It was Edmunds planet which had living conditions.
the planet New Mexico
They a lil stupid
And Ellen Burstyn's near-last line was "Our new sun....Our new world".
Implying that ALL the space stations would go through the wormhole, and All of remaining humanity would go to populate Edmunds planet.
["Pods" had no comment] XD
What. Girls can code would say either wise. Girls you didn't notice when Band moved his set onto the stage.
@@anorthositeI dont think it means that. It’s a comment talking with the assumption that Brand’s planet is the last one of humanity. If Cooper hadnt entered the tesseract (which wasnt part of the plan) Brand would be the last person in the universe so it would be “our new home”.
When she said 'no parent should have to watch their own child die' she was speaking from experience, because she saw what it did to her brother.
This movie breaks my heart every time.
And she has almost no connection to him.
@@kvm6 Yes, she does. Did you even watch the movie?
@@Hammer1987 she loves him sure. But he's been missing for a big part of her life, more that 80 years.
@@kvm6you missed the crux of the film. brand’s entire speech about love being able to transcend time and space - and she ended up being right. it doesn’t matter if they havent spoken in decades. it doesn’t matter if they havent seen each other since she was a child. that love held and carried on.
@@ibuprofriends yes that's why Murph immediately sends her dad away instead of letting him have a normal conversation with her and the family 🤦♂️.
Best Nolan movie for me just because of the sheer ambition. This one deals with themes even the smartest people on the planet are only beginning to understand. Woven into a father-daughter relationship of which there are far too few in this day and age. One of the greatest movies of all time IMO.
📠📠📠
I know I am in the vast minority but I think Interstellar is typical movie-movie. It starts out really strong but eventually goes for hard drama, fast pace, won't let scenes and story breathe, emotional drama where love is the ultimate force in the universe. I like it but I also think it is overestimated and over hyped because of the concept and idea but not the actual story. It is for 2/3 a really good sci-fi movie with the third act throwing away the science in sci-fi. I think it's a popcorn movie for people who think they are smarter than they are (I don't mean that as an insult, I am not very smart myself).
@@Battouga You should probably read Kip Thorne's "The Science of Interstellar", where he explains how much of the movie (almost the whole movie) is either scientifically accurate, or at worst, plausible from the current scientific knowledge viewpoint. It also helps that Kip Thorne himself came up with most of the science depicted in the movie. While the last section is still more fiction than science, it is still very much in line with the currently accepted scientific body of knowledge.
@@Battouga It's hard to take you seriously when you say that 1/3 of it is a typical movie because it IS a movie. From the start, to the middle and down to the end, there's always been drama to the film. People don't watch a sci-fi movie thinking "I need the entire film to be 100% accurate to the science", this ain't a documentary or actual REAL science. What, you like the wormhole concept but you didn't like the tesseract on the 3rd act? They're both not real 😂
Also, the film runs for 2h 49m, I have no idea why you think the film was face paced or that it wasn't letting scenes and the story breathe.
@@rexarsenio9447 I understand it's hard for you to take me seriously when you didn't really comprehend what I wrote, willfully or subconsciously.
Yes, I know it is a movie, that wasn't my point at all. I called it a movie-movie, a popcorn movie where things are exaggerated beyond the suspension of disbelief but it's entertaining.
I didn't argue that a sci-fi movies have to be accurate to science and it's weird you are bringing it up. Like this movie is part of your personality or something and I just offended you. Very weird.
The only times the movie breathes a little is when we are back on Earth, following the science team/Murphy but everything comes down to a figurative ticking clock. While in the space-plot it feels rushed because some scenes were convoluted and unnecessary.
This is all just my opinion and I have no problem with people loving Interstellar but please, atleast try to be honest with why you think I am wrong instead of making up arguments. I was just disapointed by the third act and I don't agree it's this cinematic masterpiece some people hold it up to be.
This movie still holds the best scene ever for me. The black hole in IMAX with all the sound around you, all the rumble and the size of it. It was mind blowing.
I agree .
The waves coming towards us.... so awesome!
It's the only movie that i have seen twice in the IMAX.
I watched this for the first time in an imax theater at the air & space museum in dc. that scene was so overpowering it brought tears to my eyes
I remember watching the docking scene in like the 3rd row of an IMAX screen as a kid, it changed my life.
"It's not possible!" "No, it's necessary" will forever remain an iconic moment paired up with one of the best soundtracks (No Time for Caution) of all time.
@@LtDan-rk4si I saw Interstellar when it came out and I can't tell you what a cerebral experience it was. If we are talking about some of my favorites Nolan movie moments paired up with awesome soundtracks, then:
1) The Dark Knight ending with Gary Oldman narration and soundtrack by the wizard Hans Zimmer
2) Oppenheimer imagining and wondering about the scientific discoveries in the environment around us paired up with "Can you Hear the Music" soundtrack is another favorite of mine now
And many more...
Hans Zimmer is the GOAT
So much science but at the heart of it, it is just a father-daughter story and that is something that makes this an even more memorable film.
Yeah exactly. I'm a space enthusiast and a big physics lover, i decided to watch this movie because of space and physics but after i finish, what i love the most is the beautiful father and daughter relationship.
@@aniqalam8231the relationship between Cooper and Murphy is my favorite part of this movie. The fact Cooper was saved and taken back to Earth/Cooper Station just moments before Murphy dies and Murphy decided and wanted Cooper to help Brand repopulate the human race is so heartbreaking and powerful at the same time. Murphy in my opinion wasn’t looking out for herself, she was looking out for humanity even in her dying moments Murphy didn’t want Cooper to stay on Cooper Station, she wanted Cooper to go help Brand even after Cooper was absent throughout Murphy’s adult and elderly years.
On the first watch, it was a masterpiece of a sci-fi movie. But when you become a parent and rewatching this, you realize Interstellar is actually a story of a parent and their kid. It breaks your heart in new ways you didn't knew were possible.
This and Arrival are the most incredible sci-fi movies about being a parent.
So true. I re-watched this movie this Tuesday after having just dropped my daughter off for her freshman year of University this past weekend. The messages he gets from his kids when the 23 years elapsed had extra impact for me. I was weeping like a baby.
@@Cars_and_Games That was bad timing! :) Give yourself at least a couple months after dropping your kid off before watching this movie.
THIS. The people who rip this movie just didn’t understand the point. The science is (weirdly) irrelevant.
@@iRunfastXC People who rip on the science of the movie just don't understand the science lmao; it checks out pretty much across the board. The only place where it gets questionable is the Tesseract, but that's a non-issue because we have no idea what happens in the singularity... Physicists even hypothesize it leads to a higher dimension, which is exactly what happens in the film.
No matter how many times I watch this, it still chokes me up. Especially now that I'm a father. The score absolutely nails the emotions.
Mathew is a monster of an actor. I'll never forget this performance.
He was not even nominated for an Oscar, criminal.
@@mordiv9he doesn’t need a piece of metal for us fans to acknowledge his greatness. This performance was a once in a lifetime event.
the best movies rely on the meaningfulness of having children. Imagine Place Beyond the Pines, Interstellar, or Gladiator without that element
Some people can get cynical over this movie. Yes, there are preposterous elements. Yes, there's a lot of emotional moments. But isn't that what movies are? To make you think and yes, even feel something over imagined concepts whether it be pure fiction or based on real events. Absolutely loved the usage of fact based science mixed in with creative freedom/theory and throwing in a lot of heart as well. I'm glad Nolan swung for the fences on this.
Kip Thorne, physicist, adviser tried to keep much science in this movie.
Movies don't need to be totally realistic fully as long as it makes sense for the movie plot. That is what the movie did well, only thing I don't like that much is the 5th dimensional thing that happened, but that is the way how the daughter got the information + Matthew's character should have died to bring realistic ending and he was hailed as hero for bringing the information to his daughter. Just my own small opinion. Still love this version too.
What do you mean? It's an incredibly realistic movie. There are only a tiny number of visuals that are dramatized, like what it would look like coming through a wormhole, but other than that this movie is like 99% scientifically accurate. My only gripe with this movie is why they ever decided to go to Miller's planet in the first place. A planet with such extreme time dilation would be an absolute no-go, regardless if it got a thumbs up from Miller.
@@thamor4746 I didn't like the 5th dimension part on my first viewing but it's really grown on me since then. I do think it makes sense that beings who have evolved to harness gravity to the point where they experience time as a physical dimension might be able to craft something like that for Coop to allow him to communicate with the past. Heck, why not?
@ohedd yah idk what they are talking about. I'm an engineering unit in college and both all of my physics professors love this movie and often use it as examples. The way they get artifical gravity in space, how a the gravity of a black hole can mess with time, to the 3D rendering of the black hole which was created by legit physicists. They hate how they explain newton's law tho.
For me, this was Nolan's best, probably will ever be. So many legendary scenes: "not a mountain, it's a wave!", "not possible, it's necessary!", the scene where Cooper sees his family age decades in the space of a few minutes' video, that freaking wormhole, that black hole Gargantua, the Tesseract. Saw it in IMAX at the theatre when it released: truly a moviegoing experience like no other!! Unbelievable it's been nearly 10 years now!
Absolutely agree! My favorite movie, by far. Experienced it seven times in the cinema, five of them in IMAX. A trully once in a lifetime experience.
Just thinking about "not possible, its necessary " scene combined with the magical bgm gives me goosebumps. So powerful.
the poem also stuck with me for a long time
Fun fact #1: The dust storm in and around 4:35 is made out of actual dust, and not VFX. The crew used large fans to blow cellulose dust into the scene, while the actors walked through the dust. That's why it seemed so realistic.
7:33 Many scientists said that this piece was phrased wrong. The major problem with Blight is not the fact that it would deplete oxygen, but rather the fact that the respiration of blight would replace the oxygen in the air with carbon dioxide. Some of them showed calculations, where they said that a planet-scale blight would deplete the oxygen in the atmosphere by just 1-2 percent which is survivable. The bigger issue is that all that 1-2% of the atmosphere would be replaced by Carbon Dioxide, which would surge up from its present quantity of 0.03% to around 1-2%. This would cause toxic reactions with the respiratory systems of most animals, causing extinctions.
Fun Fact #2: The interiors of the Endurance (where the actors did their scenes) were built to actual scale. They did build only 3 modules, but all the interiors from the LCD monitors, the seats, the boards, everything was a physical set property.
Also, the great scientist Neil DeGrasse Tyson has a great thing to say about sponsoring space exploration and space research. He said, "If we can figure out a way to turn Mars into Earth, we can figure out a way to turn Earth into Earth." This means that we could repair our own planet if we figure out the mechanics of planetary evolution.
NDT is a terrible scientist.
@@bedinoryup
@@bedinor he's captivating though and he had a point with the quote OP mentioned.
Prospects of keeping Earth liveable is a pretty lame ambition imo. We're much better than that. We should work on making the galaxy liveable.
@@oheddis it? Earth is becoming dangerous slowly but surely
I love the way you both cry, without hesitation or apologies. So healthy, so beautiful.
arguably one of the best movies ever made
not even close
@@denizardainah its definitely one of the best movies ever made
@@denizardaivery very very very very close
Is my favourite movie of all time and i've seen A LOT of movies
Bullshit logic. That your body will age differently on different planets. NONSENSE
*Interstellar is one of the greatest sci-fi films ever made.* This movie genuinely contributed to the scientific community, they actually got 2 research papers published about this. When Christopher Nolan was working on this movie rather than have an “artist’s concept” of what a black hole would look like he worked with a physicist named Kip Thorne and asked him how black holes work. So Kip gave him a bunch of maths, they sent the math to the VFX team, they put it in their render engine (which is far more powerful and expensive than anything that exists in the community) and what it produced was completely unexpected. They knew that a black hole would have what’s known as an accretion disc, but what they didn’t expect as this weird halo effect around it. The VFX team thought it was a bug so they sent it to Kip and he both confirmed that that’s what it would look like and was surprised on how well it looked. This is what a black hole would look like because the gravity is so powerful that it’s pulling light from the other side and causing you to see a second halo because you are seeing the other side of the black hole.
And the time dilation is 100% accurate. If you are near something with a strong gravitational pull like a planet larger than earth or a black hole your “clock”, meaning your time, will run slower than on earth. I’m still surprised that 8 years later no one else has used that in a sci-fi movie or tv show.
As for the movie itself, it is one of the most emotionally powerful and emotionally draining movies I have ever experienced. The scene of Cooper saying goodbye to his daughter before he leaves always makes me tear up, but when he sees the video messages from his children and sees how they have grown up over the past 23 years, I breakdown in tears and ugly cry just like McConaughy!
If only they stayed true to science and showed spaghettification too.
@@kvm6 its sci-“fi” remember not just “sci”
@@kvm6Incorrect, you haven't actually looked into it apparently, just going off of a half full set of information.
Gargantua (the black hole) would not spaghettify you right away--as even without the intervention of the film's 5th dimensional humans (which is who kept Cooper safe when he ejected in the black hole)--he would not be "spaghettified" in Gargantua, due to it being so ridiculously large, as well as a "gentle singularity". This means the black hole is so big, and it is rotating so fast, that it is at a high enough velocity to NOT cause spaghettification.
In a standard black hole you would be correct, but the kind that Gargantua is would not cause that to happen. Gargantua is so massively huge that the change from "not bent" at the event horizon to the "very bent" matter at the singularity is very gradual, so it would not lead to instant spaghettification.
However if it wasn't for the 5th dimensional beings keeping him safe and guiding him to their tesseract. obviously Cooper would have eventually been destroyed due to the aheer tidal forces, as he continued into the black hole. But the sheer size and velocity of it would prevent it for a relatively long time, so you would definitely have plenty of time to have an existential crisis before you are infinitely crushed lol
@@KrazzeeKane With you starting soo strongly in your reply, I wished it was satisfactory...
Coop falls in quite far. If he's fallen past Photon sphere (which we see happening) he can't make it out of the black hole with any physics help.
Not only that, black holes aren't worm holes. The closest would be showing a White hole (theorized to exist mathematically) which pops him out near Saturn in end.
In my version of the movie, Coop would have sent the message to Murph and then just died.
This doesn't seem to be 100% right. Logic itself should tell you this doesn't track: "they didn’t expect as this weird halo effect around it. The VFX team thought it was a bug so they sent it to Kip and he both confirmed that that’s what it would look like". How could they confirm it to be accurate if the image was so surprising? Wouldn't it require further study if the results were unanticipated?
The effect I believe you are describing is gravitational lensing, and an "Einstein Ring" (the halo) which is an old concept (first anticipated by Einstein in 1912). More important though, are "caustics" (a concept in optics) caused by a rotating black hole, sometimes called "creases" in spacetime created by the black hole's spin. This is not entirely new, either. The Interstellar paper references an earlier paper in 1994 by Blanford and Rauch, along with other papers in 2008 and 2010. The main difference is no one had placed a camera near to a black hole in their simulations/renders. From the Interstellar paper:
"These papers' caustics are relevant for a source near the black hole and an observer far away, on Earth-in effect, on the black hole's 'celestial sphere' at radius $r=\infty $. In our paper, by contrast, we are interested in light sources that are usually on the celestial sphere and an observer or camera near the black hole. For this reversed case, we shall discuss the relevant caustics in sections 3.3 and 3.4. This case has been little studied, as it is of primarily cultural interest ('everyone' wants to know what it would look like to live near a black hole, but nobody expects to make such observations in his or her lifetime), and of science-fiction interest."
It is an interesting case, but perhaps not so much to astrophysicists. I doubt it was as "unexpected" as you claim, and it is of little use, as we can't get close enough to confirm anything predicted by simulations.
The biggest contribution was the software used to produce these images: "Our ray-bundle techniques were crucial for achieving IMAX-quality smoothness without flickering; and they differ from physicists' image-generation techniques (which generally rely on individual light rays rather than ray bundles), and also differ from techniques previously used in the film industry's CGI community."
Indeed, Kip Thorne seems to care about this more-so than any "discoveries" made using the film's technology:
"Has working in films helped your own research?
Kip S. Thorne: In small ways but not major ways... Oliver James, who is the chief scientist at Double Negative, and I worked out this new method to do it which was necessary because you could not get the high resolution smooth images that were required for this science fiction movie in any other way. But the methods that we devised are now being used by astrophysicists as part of their visualization of simulations... So there is a feedback in that sense but I think beyond that the direction of the feeding is largely from the science into the film and through that to a popular culture."
No other film is able to encapsulate and blend real science, adventure, drama and humor with world class acting, cutting edge cinematography, an all time soundtrack, and iron clad plot the way that this movie can. In my opinion it is truly the greatest movie of all time.
Interstellar and Arrival are two of my most favorite pure Scie Fi movies ever. I am not talking about Action Sci Fi. This movie is pure drama, scale and such huge heart. Jessica's character is so short and yet so much heartfelt and has layers to it and every single actor has just killed it. It breaks me every time I watch like it broke Kristen. People bring up The dark knight when they talk about Nolan movies but for me this is his best work and I don't think even he can top this (atleast for me).
Arrival is my favorite movie ever, though Interstellar is close. As a parent to young kids, my God, it breaks me every time.
@@Steelburghinterstellar >>>>>>>>>
Same they hit differently.
@@rapsodicreaperthey're opinions dude
"Because my dad premised me" i lost my dad when i was 10 years old, that line ripped my soul out.
😢😢😢
Likewise.
A lot of people get thrown by the climax inside the black hole. The construct is a three-dimensional representation of fifth-dimensional space-time. In theoretical physics, the fifth dimension is essentially the three dimensions of physical space and the fourth dimension of time all crammed together - infinite space-time. The only way to feasibly experience the fifth dimension is in a place where the force of gravity is so powerful that it can go backwards through time, like inside a black hole. It's all theoretical of course, since no one has ever been inside of a black hole.
Who created that construct inside the black hole? Future humans who survived Earth's demise, populated the universe via interstellar travel, and eventually evolved to live in the fifth dimension, beyond the restraints of time and space as we know them. There's a little causal looping happening here, as these fifth-dimensional humans of the future are lending a hand to their ancestors in the past to make sure humanity manages to achieve interstellar travel and leave Earth, therefore insuring their own existence. But as fifth-dimensional beings, they've evolved to become almost godlike in nature. They can't simply tell their three-dimensional ancestors like Cooper where to go and what to do. It would be like one of us trying to talk to an ant. However, they can leave hints and clues to follow like the wormhole near Saturn and the black hole construct in order to guide them toward what they need.
It's a tesseract unfolded
Yes, perfect explanation ❤
I wonder if it's a time-loop, and we always reached back to help ourselves. Lol like, time never really changed, we deus ex machinated ourselves always. The wormhole existing proved we survived.
It's like an exercise in free will vs prophecy, kinda.❤
time cannot bend backwards, also what theory are you referring to when you mention 5 dimensional spacetime?
@@max1392
I think that's the "fi" in the "scifi" part of the plot. This was a fictional story, after all.
That was the bulk or hyperspace? Being the 5th dimension? Basically a dimension that is impossible for the current gen to access but basically the 3 and 4 dimension operate on top of it. Crazy to think about
Kristen's emotions are so contagious.
i just wanted to give her a hug. i have a daughter and i was crying too. Powerful movie.
Well done to Kristen for spotting so much before it was revealed. And great reactions from both!
Yeah she was on Nolan’s ass 😂 and her outbursts of emotion were hilarious. More Kristen plz!
A lot of the foreshadowing is pretty obvious
Loved this movie when it came out. Hits so much harder as a dad with a daughter. Her mom isn’t around either and was always the two of us
There is something so heartbreaking about seeing Kristen cry. I've become so used to her being a happy and laughing person.
No parent should watch their child die..that line is so deep...
"Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends dimensions of time and space. Maybe we should trust that, even if we can't understand it." Powerful stuff, for all its amazing science this movie is about love transcending all of that.
Seen this film lots of times but just found out recently that every tick on the wave planet represents a day passing on earth still blowing my mind all these years later
If the wave planet was a bit farther out from that black hole they probably could've survived there
Not a day, but probably a week.1 hour=7 years, 1minute = 7/60, 1 sec =7/360years ; (7×365)/360 ~7 days.
Interstellar is definitely in Top 10 greatest movies in Cinema History
This is my favorite movie of all time and makes me cry on every single watch. So glad whenever I get to see someone experience it for the first time. Glad y'all enjoyed it!
This is one of the top 3 movies I watched in my life so far. This movie's background score is so haunting, I hear it in my mind whenever I just think of this movie.
You need to watch more movies then
Kristen is gorgeous! She looks just like Annie Murphy! Great reaction guys. I cried too 😢
You're right... heart-hurting... mind-blowing... ambitious-thrilling-unexpected storytelling - Such a great reaction!
I watched this for the first time recently and CRIED a lot! Loved it
This movie makes us ball like a baby every time, and we've watched it A LOT... Probably the most emotional movie we've ever seen personally.
I just cried even with so much left from this video, this tells the sheer emotion this movie holds that even when you just hear the music, you cry.
This has become my favorite movie of all time. The story telling, the emotions, the cinematography are the best. I remind my kids at times to never give up hope and remember the docking the scene like Cooper never gave up hope of docking the ship in what seemed like an impossible situation.
They just about melted a super computer trying to render that black hole in 3D. It`s so well done that the international scientific body uses it as the definitive depiction of a black hole!
And this came out before they actually saw a black hole for the first time! It's so accurate to the real black hole!
18:47 the planet has higher gravity than earths, and he was running for a long time, he was tired and panting from that and also in shock of what was happening while also letting the other two get in first, that’s why he took long
She was so PISSED at Doyle for not getting in the ship when he had plenty of time! 😂 That gave me a good laugh because that's exactly how my girlfriend reacted in the theater when we first saw this.
BTW: This is being re-released in theaters in September 2024 in 70mm IMAX. I HIGHLY recommend seeing it if you get the chance. It really is an experience. I've seen many movies in IMAX, but this one was just in another level from anything else I've ever watched in that format. My girlfriend was actually starting to feel an almost motion-like sickness, because you really feel like you are there.
I just saw this movie and it's by far my favorite I totally got to see it in theaters
IMO Doyle kept the door clear; because Brand's survival was the most important for Humanity. Knew that he had already exhausted himself from the increased gravity
Remember that planet had higher gravity, he was running as well and we could see he was panting, that along with letting brand in and in shock.
My favorite Nolan film and in my top 10 favorite movies of all time. The story, the soundtrack, the visuals - all were fantastic. If you really want your mind blown read the story about how Zimmer came up with the soundtrack.
the one movie I will forever regret not going to see in the cinemas when it came out.
Interstellar is an amazing film. Every person I've shown this film that thought they'd hate it, loved it.
Loved the reaction, I personally enjoyed a lot the film but the music… Oh my, Hans Zimmer did the best soundtrack I have ever heard. FYI: Zimmer was told that he could create this music as he wished, he wasn’t even told that it was a space-related movie but a story of a father and son, so he ended up making this music thinking about his son. 🫶🫶
I’m not gonna lie, i straight cried at that ending too. Just the fact she held on to life to see her dad again. 😭😭. This movie….👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Lost the count how many times I have seen the movie.. What a genius of a director.. A grand salute to Nolan
seeing this movie in anything less than an IMAX theatre is a real injustice
Great reaction! This movie is not just a Nolan achievement, the theoretical physics and advisors that Nolan got to make a real scientific movies has never been done. These Physicists wrote a scientific paper about black holes from the time working in this movie, that we can see in the movie about Gargantua.
From dust clouds being real and not CGI, to Nolan buying acres of land to grow corn for the shots, building real scale endurance, the time effects from space travel, this movie is still a masterpiece of cinema….. yes even with its few scientific flaws, the gains are more prominent.
Loved the movie in the IMAX screen and was amazed; now I love it even more watching it with my daughter while holding her very close every time
Loved this reaction! I think Nolan should have explained more about relativity for people because 99% of reactors don't understand what's going on. I've also seen a lot of reactors say you'd get more done with a 67-hour day on that planet but it just means there's more light and more night. You're still human. You still need to sleep. If you moved there, you couldn't suddenly stay awake normally for 67 hours.
Yea I was thinking that, obviously it's just the planets rotation that causes day/night cycles, I don't know how the human circadian rhythm would adapt to that, would probably have to be artificial ways to do it.
Perhaps in 10000 years lol
Yeah exactly. You are still operating on a 24 hour cycle and you will sleep for at least 7-8 hours of that.
I just watched this movie some days ago and it is perfect! The soundtrack, the acting and the storyline is insane to me. And I don't necessarily mean all the space stuff going on. It definitely elevates it. I'm not a father and I'm no where near to be one but Murphys pain in some way feels relatable and Coopers decision as well. I think most humans would rather travel to the end of the universe for their kids if theres the tiniest chance to save their kids and when Cooper finally sees the videos of their kids 23 years after theyve sent them, crying in deep agony, regret and fear with probably almost no hope left felt so true
Awww ... Seeing my Andrew shed a tears like that is broke my heart 😭😭😭❤❤❤.
I'm so glad watching this at the cinema, very very spectacular 🏆🏆🏆 just amazing ‼️
Interstellar on imax is to this day my fav cinematic experience (even better than Infinity War & EndGame). My only regret is not seeing Inception & The Dark Knight in the theater as well
Im just gonna put this out there i dont care anymore.. I think Andrew is one of the most beautiful man I have ever seen.
Interstellar is and will always be my favorite movie.
I cry like a little baby every time i watch Interstellar
Even after movie complete we can feel music in our mind for a long while😢❤
Thank you for helping me re-live this movie with all the emotions I still feel. Best movie ever
My favorite movie of all time. I’m glad to see there are reactions for it. I’m loving them!
One of my all time favorite films. I don't trust anybody who doesn't cry during the message scene. So...I now find you both trustworthy...especially you Kristen! :)
Kristen had the best reaction.. the anger and the emotion she went through were fun to watch.
23 years 4 months, 8 days, thank you Brand.
I love this movie, two movies I never get tired of watching. Home Alone, childhood movie and Interstellar, ever since a kid I was fascinated with space. I’d have books about nuclear astrophysics. This movie has to be my favorite.
Not only the best Nolan film for me, but it is my favorite movie of all time. I saw it in Imax when it came out and it was just perfect.!
Nolan’s most openly emotional film, he fully lived up to his “Stanley Kubrick’s eye and Steven Spielberg’s heart” identity with this grand sci-fi epic about the sheer force of will that we have for those we love.
Everytime i watch this epic movie i cry my eyes out over and over.
People always remember the FIGHT OR FLIGHT RESPONSE... but there is also the FREEZE response... the poor man froze in whatever was happening to him... loved this movie!
I Watched this movie with my father more than 110 times and every time, when i watch it makes me chill like how the heck they shot this scene and the emotions are purely blessed one. man background score ufff like i can listen to it..till i die
This is my first time seeing you guys. What a fantastic reaction. 👍
It's a very stressful and emotional ride, so happy you both enjoyed it.
Caught this twice on the big screen back in 2014, made the girl I was dating at the time full on ugly cry.
If you listen closely you can hear a tic sound this is the sound of every day that passes on earth
I just wanted to hug Kristen so bad as she was balling her eyes out. It's okay, Kristen, it's a movie (what a movie tho)
my top 5 space scifi movies
1. Arrival
2. Interstellar
3. Oblivion
4. Passengers
5. Elysium
This movie makes me want to go back home immediately from work and hug my kids.
Yep! The more you watch it the more you love it! Great movie and fantastic soundtrack!
When they land on the ocean planet you can hear the soundtrack composed of rhythmic "ticks" every 1.25 seconds. Since every hour on the planet corresponds to seven years on Earth with a quick calculation it can be understood that each "tick" corresponds to an entire day spent on Earth. I hope the comment is understandable, your fan from Italy.
I suck at emotions and can rarely feel them, but this film is the only way I ever really feel anything. I just wish and hope I can feel the connection the characters have to their family members and partners. I always relate to the character that dies on the first planet, forgotten, overwhelmed by the waves, and never having a connection to others. Favorite movie of all time.
Hopefully one day Kristen and Achara can watch “The Longest Week.”
It’s a romantic and witty, slow Sunday kind of film. Starring Jason Bateman and Olivia Wilde.
Thank you for the super! We'll look into this!
i remember in theater , we saw each one of us with red eyes (crying all along) , So beautiful movie.
I can never get tired of this movie.
Watched it earlier this year.
I watched any reaction that pops up on my YT feed.
I didn't catch that it was Murph in the beginning. So when they showed her at the end, I literally balled my eyes out. As a parent that would have killed me to see my child so old.
This is such a beautifully done movie.
The sheer outrage at Doyle's death is fantastic. 😂
I watched this movie in theaters. And I just couldn't believe how amazing it was. I wanted more of this movie . i wanted it to not be over . Amazing Hust amazing . Docking scene was Fantabulous.
The most emotional fantasy film 😢
Give Kristen a huge for us lol.
It's hard seeing such a bubbly person crying.
Nolan hit us all in the gut during the video playback scene.
The conversation at the end always gets me. "Because my dad promised me."
one of my favourite movies of all time. its so deep and has many connections along with deep thought provoking sequences
My all time favorite movie, must have watched it like 10 times, every time you watch it you learn something new
Saw it twice in the theater, didn't notice the lady in the beginning was Murph. When I saw it the second time, even more amazing. Well spent 6+ hours. The science was mostly real (black hole would be a sphere, no sound in space). Neat (lack of better word) that the good things could happen (to a degree) but also scary the bad stuff is a possibility.
I just watched this about 20 minutes ago. As a grown man I’m still crying over it. What a fuccking masterpiece
I always wonder how this plays for those who missed it on IMAX, and I'm glad to see it still hits powerfully. Not all sci fi movies meant for the big screen can do that
The Best movie ever!!! The Docking Scene after Dr. Mann dies, best scene and soundtrack ever!!! PERIOD!!!
Love Kirsten honest reaction on stupidity of characters :D
The father-daughter scene at the end probably made 99% of people cry. It is the sad true about relativity. If we ever are able to travel great distances at high speeds, whoever decides to go, better have nobody left on Earth, because it will be the last time they see them most likely.
I saw this movie for the second time 2 days ago and it still amazes me how good it is!!! Wish i saw it in theaters!
I watched that movie a year after it released and I am not lying after that much of time it still my favourite movie. I have a lot of knowledge about those space-time theories so that movie makes a place in my heart at the time of first watch.
Can you hear the clicking sound , when they are in that sea, that every click is a equivalent to a day on earth. Director is briliant
Excellent film but still prefer Inception. Inception is absolute cinematic perfection and every scene feels iconic. Interstellar is presents us with enormous concepts - wormholes, the concept of gravity/time ("Every hour we spend on that planet will be seven years on Earth..." WTAF?!), types of planet (i.e. covered entirely in water, another completely in ice)
The Years of Messages scene, after all this years, whew 😢😢😢
Seemed like this really hit home. For another incredible sci-fi movie with very similar themes, check out Arrival with Amy Adams. It's another masterpiece, this time by Denis Villeneuve. Possibly my favorite movie of all time (btw, Interstellar is top 5 for me).
"Cooper, what are you doing?"
"Docking"
Where will the world be without men! Salute \m/
one of the best sci-fi movie ever !!! and Kristen, you are contagious :)
If you wouldn't have cryed.... I would have stopped watching your channel. Beautiful reaction!!!
I’ve seen every Christopher Nolan film. I love Inception and The Prestige and several others but this one just might be my favorite. The emotion is off the charts, and I’m here for it. ✌️