The comment "I didn't know Matthew McConaughey crying could make me feel so sad" pretty much sums up this movie.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
exactly lol
@natecloe85358 ай бұрын
I dont know why I didnt see it coming when he sat down to watch 28 friggin YEARS of messages. I was only wondering if any were from Murph. The moment Tom said "I met a new girl Dad" I was done. I was crying a split second before it showed him crying. But NOTHING in this movie..or many other movies ftm...broke me like the two one liners from Murph. One old, one younger. "But today is my birthday." And "Because my Dad promised me"
@oldschoolgenius80698 ай бұрын
I didn’t cry
@ghostmkc40459 ай бұрын
The big meaning behind this film is that love is a gravitational force. Love transcends time and space. It brings us closer as well as apart. The other message is that no one is going to save you, you have to save yourself. The bigger picture is for humanity to learn how to save themselves, It all starts with love.
@patinho55898 ай бұрын
Yes but that is invented nonsense. Now, love is actually the 3rd degree manifestation of the initial creative force (that’s a quote from a being called Mars Sector 6.. we have the audio recording of him saying it)… so that’s not invented fiction.
@jinxysaberk8 ай бұрын
@@patinho5589it’s science fiction not science fact buddy just because nolan wanted the things that truly do exist to be scientifically accurate does not mean majority of this movie isn’t fiction
@WHADATBOYNAMEIS8 ай бұрын
nah. gravity transcends time and space. the reason the plan of putting the data in the watch worked was cuz coop knew murph would go back for it, because of love.
@Kbax36147 ай бұрын
@@jinxysaberkno it is the dudes opinion. Movie doesn’t say love is gravity, that is stupid
@Kbax36147 ай бұрын
@@WHADATBOYNAMEISit doesn’t. Gravity itself is bending of space time. There is no such thing as a force of gravity. It is merely am illusion
@mojoemama2529 ай бұрын
Watch it again…and then watch it again! It blows my mind every time, and I ball like a baby every time too!
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
don’t blame you lol this one is gonna be a for sure one to cry to for life lol
@davidhoward62549 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact There is no antidote for the line 'Because my dad promised me...' This movie was robbed at the Oscars in 2014. In my humble opinion, Christopher Nolan's best movie and my personal favorite movie.
@iulia.bianca.b8 ай бұрын
@@davidhoward6254 Couldn't agree more!!! ❤ I think you're the first person that I found that says it's Christopher Nolan's best, and their personal favorite. Never found anyone else who felt the same as me 😊❤️
@thecaptain108 ай бұрын
@@iulia.bianca.b I feel the same, many people give that credit to Inception. And I understand that Inception is great, but it's definitely not on this level, maybe people don't understand this movie enough to love it.
@TheAlkochef8 ай бұрын
@@iulia.bianca.b wut. go to any reaction of interstellar and everybody will make that claim. its a masterpiece
@4lefcristian9 ай бұрын
"Maybe he is dead and this is the place where you go if you are a astronaut" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
you know Astronaut Heaven bc apparently they have their own lol
@4lefcristian8 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact 😂😂
@ChrisB-k7b8 ай бұрын
that shit was funny. Ill never be an astronaut for that reason alone lol
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@mustricsgeza24318 ай бұрын
One fan theory says that he actually dies and the last thing his mind does is think of his children and it's all his minds fabrication
@swayj10209 ай бұрын
Coopers walks into a room full of his descendents and doesnt even look at them in that moment. Only has eyes for his daughter ❤
@jamesh24018 ай бұрын
Always a touching scene, but I also found it odd that he doesn't interact with them at all (or at least it isn't shown). It's not like they're distant relations, some of them will be grandchildren, what grandparent wouldn't want to meet their grandchildren?
@stefsmurf8 ай бұрын
@@jamesh2401 You have to remember, from his respective, he's only been gone weeks, maybe months. It's not like he's even adjusted to the fact that his daughter is older than him, let alone than he has grandkids walking about. While family, they're strangers to him, and it's his last chance to speak to his daughter. Would have done the same thing.
@hawks77758 ай бұрын
@@jamesh2401he spent the right amount time with her...see each other say his goodbyes and let her family have the rest of their time together before she passes....they can always meet up later in a family reunion....but he still has a mission to accomplish....
@deusexmachina22228 ай бұрын
@@jamesh2401I’ve always felt like Christopher Nolan movies has a slight “storybook quality”… Wow they may be very grounded in reality… There’s almost a dream like storybook like aspect to them… So him entering a room and going straight to his daughter in my mind kind of weirdly fits it…
@mojoemama2529 ай бұрын
What will really blow your mind, Anne’s character was correct about listening to love. She was right, BUT if he had listened to her, he would have never got the quantum data, to send back to earth, and save humans. He had to ignore her, and sacrifice himself, in order to survive and save humans. Mind blowing stuff.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
oh wow i wish i woulda put that together real time ! love that!
@mojoemama2529 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact I didn’t catch it until maaaaaybe my 3rd time watching it. I watch this a couple of times per year. There are so many layers to this thing, it’s worth watching over and over.
@centerstagemediaoutlet22689 ай бұрын
Which is crazy cuz it makes Brand even MORE right. Her love for Edmunds but Coopers love for his children is the combination.
@nashantikeriana78248 ай бұрын
Its literally all about how love transcends time and space. Cooper's love for his daughter pushed him to get the quantum data to save humans and Brand's love for Edmund pushed her to the only survivable planet. it's just all so amazing when you sit and think about it.
@natecloe85359 ай бұрын
I came into the movie like "This might be ok. McConaughey is a legend." I came out with it as a top 3 favorite movie ever. After one watch. This movie is FANTASTIC.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
oh yeah agreed
@amber70s228 ай бұрын
What is your top 3 ! I want to know 😂
@Sandlund937 ай бұрын
@@amber70s22 Mine is Interstellar, Vertigo (1958) and The Hateful Eight. Those 3 directors are also my top 3, in that order.
@glennwelsh97849 ай бұрын
Cooper and TARS don't get pulled into spaghetti because Gargantua is a "gentle giant" black hole of which the gravitational pull isn't quite as strong, allowing whole objects to fall in without getting completely pulled apart. They address it earlier in the movie. The whole sequence inside the black hole is theoretical because no one has ever been inside a black hole. (The nearest black hole to Earth is still so far away that any human who tried getting to it would die of old age before getting anywhere near it.) But the theory of relativity says that the gravity at the center of a black hole can be so powerful that it can bend, stretch, and move forward and backwards across all of time. When you think about time and space, it effectively means that infinite space-time could be experienced and accessed at a black hole's center. That is what the bookshelf construct in which Cooper and TARS finds themselves in. It was created so Cooper and TARS could relay the data backwards in time to Murphy. The beings that built that construct are future humans whom have evolved to become fifth-dimensional beings. They've essentially reached backwards in time to help their three-dimensional ancestors - Cooper and Murphy - acquire the data they need to achieve *interstellar* travel and allow for mass migration from Earth, insuring humanity's survival and eventual evolution.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
oh i see, thanks for explaining!
@2041545299 ай бұрын
How many years in the future you reckon that civilization is
@Big_Tex9 ай бұрын
The gravitational pull isn’t any less (by definition any event horizon is just strong enough to prevent light escaping outward). The difference is the gravity force’s gradient - the change in strength from one point to another as you inch your way forward. Spaghettification happens because even on the same piece of gear or flesh, the gravity one centimeter inward pulls harder than one centimeter outward, and so stretches or destroys the falling object. If a black hole is more massive, its event horizon is larger in diameter and (apparently) the gradient just inside is less severe.
@nicoladc898 ай бұрын
Kip Thorne explained that in a simple way: years ago he believed nobody could survive to a blackhole, later we found some gentle singularity and now he's not sure anymore. Is this enough for a scientific theory? Probably not, but it surely is for a movie. In a scientific festival in Italy, Kip Thorne explain all his theory on the traversable wormholes (also called Morris-Thorne wormholes) and ended his presentation saying something like "do I really believe this things could exist? No, but I also thought we would never be able to detect the gravitational waves, I've been proved wrong many times, sometime spectaculary, so don't take my pronunciament too seriously, I could well be wrong". (Thorne won the Nobel Prize for detecting the gravitational waves) I think this is an important lesson for a lot of people who have never though "I could be wrong", especially when they're talking about things they know far less well than Thorne knows physics. Scientists have no certainties, conspiracy theorists have certainties. Only by not having certainties can you have an open mind to new discoveries. As Murph said in the movie "Science is about admitting what we don't know".
@lsaria59988 ай бұрын
Spaghettification is also affected by Relativity. It occurs to an outside observer but for the object itself the relative difference in time and space between localized objects is reduced because time doesn't pass as quickly. It's like the difference between stretching some chewing gum rapidly versus slowly; one breaks the other stretches and can rebound. The "gentle singularity" is like the elastic limit on a spring. Springs will stretch and return to form, but a spring has a limit beyond which it is permanently deformed and can't retake its original shape.
@iamgriego9 ай бұрын
This is the 50th KZbin channel that I watched them reacting to this movie and guess what? I cried along with them again and again and again, this movie is just too good, "Interstellar" I'd say! But no joke, it broke me again in a hundred pieces. Christopher Nolan thank you so much for this, and Hanz Zimmer? Hello? Your music moved me in an unexplainable ways! Such a great movie, I'd say my top 5 favorite, also great reaction from you two! Your channel is growing faster than a speed of light and I'm happy for you. ❤❤
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
thank you so much! thanks for always commenting and being so kind! we appreciate you! we also agree about all that you said. the music is in this is TOP TIER!
@lilbitx4969 ай бұрын
What a beautiful movie. Definitely cried more than once
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
oh yeah for sure
@HopeIsForbiddenHere9 ай бұрын
I love how Nolan had Dr Hugh Mann (seriously, look it up) explain that Plan A was necessary because people will choose to save themselves over the species, only to learn that Dr Mann, the "best of us," had pressed his button to be rescued at what could have been the cost of humanity (If the Endurance didn't have enough fuel, they would have all died on that planet.) He was a literal example of why Plan A was necessary.
@vitaboy8 ай бұрын
Dr “Hugh Man” has a name that literally is pronounced “human” to further emphasize how human he really was with his faults, self-delusions, and coping.
@elstukov8 ай бұрын
Did you notice the robot called Kipp saying 'Please don't make me...' right before it exploded?
@centerstagemediaoutlet22689 ай бұрын
Mr October couldn't even hide it and go off camera on this one. RESPECT can't hide the emotion from this film. 😊love
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
we were passionate about this one lol
@Laroyeexu9 ай бұрын
The second handshake scene contains a reference to Michelangelo's painting, 'The Creation of Adam'.
@lordmortarius5389 ай бұрын
The film is set in the mid to late 2070's, after the discover of a crop blight that feeds off of nitrogen rather than oxygen (our atmosphere is about 80% nitrogen) and thus grew rapidly into a massive threat to global food supplies, causing nations to panic and kickstarted essentially a world war over food. After it got worse and everyone finally realised no one was going to be spared from this, they stopped fighting and started trying to find a way to keep going. The reason there was so much dust is the same as the Dust Bowl that occurred in the midwest US in the 1930s: the plant root systems holding the soil in place were gone, which allowed the soil to dry out very quickly and get blown about by the wind. In the '30s it was because prairie grasses were torn out to be replaced with crops, and in this timeline it was because those crops were now dying out and not being replaced with anything. The thing that Cooper finds himself in inside the black hole is a 4th-dimensional construct called a tesseract, aka a hypercube. It's essentially a slice of time that one can physically traverse in 3 dimensions, as that's what makes up spacetime, 3 spatial dimensions (length, width, breadth) and 1 time dimension, which we can only normally experience in one direction. A tesseract allows us to experience other moments in time as if we were walking from one room to another. Also, the ticking you hear after they land on Miller's planet, that's 1 day passing on Earth, since their relative timeframe is massively slowed due to the gravitational effect of being so close to the black hole. That's also the reason for the huge waves and the shallow water: due to its proximity to a strong gravitational force, the planet is likely nearly a perfect sphere depending on its rotational period, and if the entire world is covered in water, that same gravity exerted by the black hole will pull on it, just like the moon does to Earth. Those waves are literal tidal waves that circle the planet endlessly, driven by the gravity of the black hole the planet orbits, and if most of the water is in those waves, there won't be hardly any in between them, just like a tsunami wave; all the water is pulled into the wave. The ship they're in at the end is called an O'Neill cylinder, the best way humans have come up with to manage interstellar travel. The inside surface of the cylinder experiences the equivalent of 1G due to rotating the whole thing fast enough for centrifugal force to simulate gravity, and is where the living areas, food production, and pretty much everything else we need to survive are found, while the docking port would be located on one end of the cylinder in the middle (so one can rotate to match the speed of the vessel and attach). The gravity along the centerline would be minimal, and elevators down to the inner surface would gradually see an increase the closer they got to the bottom. Fusion torch engine would be situated at one end to provide acceleration (and deceleration when approaching the destination by flipping the ship in flight), and on the inside would be a large series of lamps to simulate a night/day cycle. The Rama book series by Arthur C Clarke goes into this further, it's fascinating. And finally, the software they used to predict and render the visuals of what the black hole would look like from scientific data and measurements were later confirmed by researchers to be pretty damn accurate after we got our first picture of an actual black hole. The reason the luminous matter around it seems to curve up and over is due to gravitational lensing, bending the light from the back side to be visible from any perspective.
@seecha89708 ай бұрын
The most basic way to break down how the Tesseract works is like, taking for example, Game of Thrones. The entire season was created in a linear fashion from episode 1 all the way to the very end. But all those episodes have already happened and you can't go back in time to redo those scenes. So how the Tesseract works is like owning all the seasons of Game of Thrones in your library. So now, you have access and the capability to go back and watch any moment in the history of the tv show because it's all compiled into a package. You can't actually put yourself in the any scene, but you can interact with any scene as you stop, playback, fast forward or simply just let a scene playout. The Tesseract is a compilation of every moment in Murph's life and Cooper is the viewer of all those scenes. So although he can't go back put himself in those events to redo them, he does limited interaction capabilities by using gravity to shift and manipulate the environment. I hope that makes a little more sense.
@Aurich889 ай бұрын
If you think of the gravity around a black hole as a ramp, then Gargantua was so damn big that the curve of the ramp was very gentle, even at the event horizon. This is what Rommely was explaining when he called it a "gentle singularity", and it's why Cooper didn't get turned into spaghetti before falling into the tesseract.
@mansoryO9 ай бұрын
bruh i had to watch it a few times to fully capture it, didnt think it was sad the first time,but 10 years later with a kid, i cannot stop tearing
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
omg having kids make this so hard lol we agree
@thegrunbeld68768 ай бұрын
This movie blows my mind in each rewatch
@lsaria59988 ай бұрын
So the lattice structure he falls into inside the singularity; that is all Murph's bookcase in her bedroom, but each part of the plaid pattern is like a different snapshot in time. He finds that location because of his connection to her, and can then travel in the 5th dimension of time to any point he wants by moving through the three-dimensional space created by "them". He can then find any point in time to communicate with her through the bookcase.
@jacerogers99036 ай бұрын
The "coordinates" that were in Murph's room took them to NORAD! Which is North American Aerospace Defense Command at the Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Which also happens to be the state that I live in too! 🤘😁
@justintorres5028 ай бұрын
Also to answer one of your questions on the paradox of Cooper bringing himself to space. One of the concepts of Spacetime is that any and all things that can happen, have already happened, are currently happening, and will happen, endlessly and in an endless and infinite variety of ways. Really makes your brain hurt trying to wrap your head around it.
@Ant1ev08 ай бұрын
on millers planet (the water one) the soundtrack is the driving force. every tick is 1.25sec which translates to one day on earth. it starts with only the metronome ticking and its getting wilder as the scene goes on. but you always here the ticking. its insane how good it is
@AndyFry-Artist9 ай бұрын
When they start their mission the words spoken are from a poem by Dylan Thomas called ‘Do not go gentle into that good night’ Great reaction as always guys 💛
@rebeccahanson69418 ай бұрын
This movie is so fantastic. Great story, great writing, great acting. I cry every time.
@charlesbarnes69129 ай бұрын
My favorite sci-fi movie! This sound track is absolutely beautiful 😊
@johnplaysgames31208 ай бұрын
The way I always think about the Grandfather Paradox that you mentioned (going back in time and killing your grandfather before you were born) is that we misinterpret the initial condition as traveling only back in time - like in a straight line backward along the 4th dimension, in the opposite direction of entropy - but what's really happening is we're traveling at an angle that's going backward along the 4th dimension while also angling across the 5th dimension (alternate timelines), and so the place where you kill "your" grandfather is not the past of the timeline you started from. It's an alternate past where a person (you) from another dimension came in and killed the grandfather of what would've been an alternate universe "you" if you hadn't killed the alternate you's ancestor. To put a more intuitive picture of alternate timelines in your head, think of it like this: - Start with a point. That's zero dimensions. - Stretch that point in one direction and it becomes a line, which is 1 dimension. - Grab the long edge of the line and extrude it out and it becomes a square, which is 2 dimensions. - Grab the face of the square and extrude it up, and you have a cube. That's 3 dimensions. 3 dimensions (length, width, and depth) is how we experience the space in which we exist and what most people think of as "our reality." - Now, grab that 3-dimensional cube and extrude it in a new direction (in the direction of entropy) and you have a 4-dimensional hypercube. That would be like a shape made up of all the moments in our physical world, all existing at once. This is our timeline. - And, finally, grab one "side" of that timeline and extrude it in yet another direction, creating a 5th dimensional field made up of "timelines" sitting next to each other. Really, each "timeline" would just be a cross-section of this larger field made up of all possibilities rather than necessarily distinct and separate "lines" themselves, but because of the way we process information, we interpret our trajectory across this field - and all the things that are happening along that trajectory - as a line that's separate from the rest of the field (aka "our timeline"). It's like cutting off a thin slice of an apple and thinking it's the whole apple (or that each slice is a separate apple, all sitting next to each other to create a "hyper-apple" or "apple field" when, really, it's all just one apple that we've cut into slices). Is it possible, then, to travel ONLY in the 4th dimension and not also angle across alternate timelines, thereby giving the possibility of creating a true paradox (like the Grandfather Paradox is supposed to be)? Idk. If not - like, if there's a physics reason why moving in one direction makes it so you also have to move in the other, kind of like a time-space version of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle or there's a limit like how objects with mass can't exceed the speed of light and therefore are always moving at an angle on a time-space graph - then that could potentially solve any paradox and the nature of the universe would have a sort of automatic balance. Also, if all those moments and possible moments already exist all at once, then that sort of removes the idea of free will and means that all we'd be doing is "traveling" along an already existing field of cross-sections of energy which we interpret (in our moment-by-moment way of processing information) as people, places, and events. Nothing would actually be changing; it would just have the illusion of change because of the 3D way we process information (like the way you read a book word by word or line by line; even though all the words in the book already exist on all the pages, you can't just look at a book and take in all the words at once. You have to read the book bit by bit in a sort of "scanning" process). This would mean that you can't create paradoxes because you're never actually creating or changing anything. No matter where you go in space-time-possibility, it was already there, exactly as it's always been. All you're doing is observing it (and your thoughts and actions are part of the "it" as well, not separate from it). So, if you go back and kill your grandfather in some "past," you always killed your grandfather in that particular past and the you that would've come from it has never existed. The you that did the killing is a different you from a different point on the time-space-possibility graph. Anyway... The 5th dimension is where the future humans in the movie exist. They're able to look at time, space, and (presumably) possibility all at once. Coop's unevolved 3D-oriented mind wouldn't have been able to comprehend the 5th dimension or how to navigate it, so "they" built a 3-dimensional representation of the timeline following the trajectory of Murph's room so that he could navigate it, find the key points, and communicate with her. It's kind of like the way we work with computers today. People would struggle to understand and speak in machine language, so programmers build us an interface - Windows or Mac OS or some relatively easy programming language, e.g. - that translates our requests into machine language that the computer can understand and translates the computer's responses from machine language into words and images we can understand. Basically, the 5th dimensional future-humans - the "bulk beings," I think TARS called them at one point - built Coop a Windows desktop for Time, and an app that allowed him to work with all the moment's of Murph's room along the timeline. That's where he was at the end. When the job was done, they closed the app (aka "the tesseract") and dropped him off near Saturn to be found and rescued.
@Chuchosun8 ай бұрын
When cooper sees murphy again after all those years and when she's visibly old then him, he's trying to hold back the tears to try and still be strong for her always gets me, that and the music. How hans zimmer didn't get an oscar is criminal.
@Konitama8 ай бұрын
I have to confess... I like watching reactions to Interstellar because seeing people cry makes me connect with them and I end up crying too. It just puts you right back in that moment like it's your first time watching the movie, too. Out of like a dozen Interstellar reactions only one person didn't even shed a tear and well... I can safely say I won't be watching their reactions anymore... lol. Like how could you not cry at least once in this movie?
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
someone didn’t cry to this? HOW?
@Tallenn8 ай бұрын
A tesseract isn't something dreamt up for the MCU. It's a theoretical construct. So, like a cube is a square in three spatial dimensions, a tesseract is a cube in four spatial dimensions. It wasn't built by future humans, it was built by 5 dimensional (four spatial plus time) beings that are evolved from humans (probably far down the line - not like humans are evolved from some ape-like ancestor, more like humans are evolved from some shrew-like ancestor). At least, that is how I am understanding it.
@HalkerVeil4 ай бұрын
The one flaw in this movie is that the time it would have taken him to travel into the black hole would have taken longer than the current age of the universe. So he would be way more than 124 years old by time he popped out the wormhole back into the solar system. Which is powered by the black hole. Some say the beings selected a time for him to pop out at. But nothing can travel through time, only the side effect of time can do that, which is gravity. But other than that the movie is pretty accurate to reality as we know it now.
@qasimraja28448 ай бұрын
Interstellar ❤️ Nolan's greatest work for humanity ❤️
@PastaDon_9 ай бұрын
"I don't really get what I'm trying to say, but I get what I'm trying to say"🤣🤣.. Had me rolling.. it's all good, 100% I get what your trying to say my dude!!😁
@carlo70no6 ай бұрын
I recommend 2010 The Year We Make Contact, by Hyams, 1984, sequel to 2001 A Space Odyssey by Kubrick, written by A. Clarke, with Roy Scheider, John Lithgow, Helen Mirren…
@luciferbhoi8 ай бұрын
"Its not possible, it's necessary." That scene with the fabulous background score from Hans Zimmer always gets me.
@C.V.Q9 ай бұрын
The black hole CGI for Gargantuan was specifically made for this movie and was based on the best science we had at the time. So it ended up being the most accurate visual representation we have ever seen of a simulated black hole. So real science was advanced during the creation of this movie which is why a lot of astrophysics nerds have a special place in their heart for it
@Laochri9 ай бұрын
Going back thru your library of videos, Is this your first Christopher Nolan film? Some of his other films are superb; His Batman Trilogy, Inception, Insomnia, Memento, The Prestige, Dunkirk, Oppenheimer. He is one of my Favorite Directors.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
yes it was and boy was it good! adding those to our list!
@HeisenStark139 ай бұрын
Christopher Nolan said his movies aren't meant to be completely broken down scientifically. He goes above and beyond to be accurate but the story will override that
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
can't wait for more of this guy!
@fina49078 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact I would recommend "Inception": what a great movie, as mind-blowing as "Interstellar".
@SCharlesDennicon8 ай бұрын
Hence the BS about love.
@pierluigicosentino85267 ай бұрын
SCharlesDennicon...you need to find somebody..then u will understand
@SCharlesDennicon7 ай бұрын
@@pierluigicosentino8526 What are you talking about? I'm not saying love is bad. I've been in love. It's cool. I'm just saying that it's not a magical fucking power capable of doing what Hathaway's character suggests it is. Simple.
@stefanhuddleston68163 ай бұрын
Dr. Brand nails what this film is all about when she says, "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."
@auntvesuvi38729 ай бұрын
Thanks, Mrs. & Mr. October! 🧑🚀 All hail director Christopher Nolan for a true science fiction gem.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
love him if this is what he gives us
@auntvesuvi38729 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact He has a standard of excellence.
@YungTunaWave8 ай бұрын
You don’t own anything, only thing you own is your Conscious , your soul and your time. Thanks i needed to hear that.
@jacovisser94339 ай бұрын
One of the best movies i ever saw the end always gets to me when Coop sees his daughter as a old lady but this movie is also scary because i live in South Africa and we almost never get bad weather and about 1 tornado a year but we had 15 tornadoes since September last year and 2 in my home town in less than a month was scary but also somewhat amazing to see a tornado
@WhatAm1doinggg9 ай бұрын
in the fictional meta of science fiction, the type of time paradox you're asking about is usually portrayed as and interpreted as a constant force, an event that happens in every reality, that is impossible to change. the dr strange ep in What If? mentions this. one way to fictionally think of this time loop of - what happened the first time? or how did it happen the first time? is to imagine a soap bubble being blown thru a bubble toy, and once the bubble is fully formed, it contains the entire loop's worth of events. even though the bubble starts from a flat plane of soap, which is the time axis value=zero, once it's inflated into the sphere it contains the all of the time's events inside an n+1 higher dimension - so it doesn't really matter what event started first, because the bubble itself had its genesis in a timeless dimension.
@SwiddyDiddy8 ай бұрын
First reaction I’ve seen from you guys, but also first reaction I’ve seen where someone’s already familiar with a lot of the concepts. Calling out time dilation etc. You’re very intelligent sir!
@conradmarcotte67498 ай бұрын
So good. Fantastic movie. One of my favorite ever. The father/daughter dynamic tears my heart to pieces and hits way too close to home for me.
@SOLIDCHIMERA8 ай бұрын
you guys are some of the best reactors on KZbin thank you for the great content! Subbed :)
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the sub! and you are awesome
@volosh67gayo498 ай бұрын
49:47 a tesseract is a 4th dimensional cube
@georgesurim56119 ай бұрын
This was the best. My favorite reactors watching my favorite movie. Doesn't get any better.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
you're the best!
@georgesurim56119 ай бұрын
Not a space movie but one I rank very high though I've only watched it twice cause it makes me ball my eyes out is called what dreams may come. It stars Robin Williams.
@janb928 ай бұрын
Yeah, astronauts are so impressive because they have to be mathematicians, scientists, doctors, engineers, mechanics, pilots etc. I will never get over how impressive this movie is. It’s one of my favs of all time. It’s sci-fi but realistic because the filmmakers did actual deep research.
@Ali1for1ever4 ай бұрын
الفلم الاعظم على الاطلاق كان لي الحظ بمشاهدة a interstellar
@jip58899 ай бұрын
The beauty of this film is that it makes you cry whether you understand astrophysics or not.
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
agreeddd!
@cameronfilms54468 ай бұрын
Scientists wrote research papers on this movie. The rendition of the blackhole was so accurate that when they actually imaged one for the first time 4 years after the movie came out, it looked very similar. Some of the individual frames of the black hole took 100 days to render!
@stefsmurf8 ай бұрын
Not quite true. What happened was this movie tried to be so accurate, that 2 scientific papers were written based on the research done for this movie. And one of them was about what a black hole looks like. What they did was feed the formula for how a black hole interacts with space, in 3D, and then the rendering was done for the movie. The Visual Effects guy came back and told the scientist, hey, we f*C*(Ed up, and the scientist, was like, oh, I guess folding of space in 3 dimensions leads to light bending around itself (like shown in the movie). (Basically, the image we see in the movie is the black hole from both sides. The gravity is so strong that it's lensing itself, like taking a picture through a thick glass .) The rendering was so bizarre at first since it's hard to 'see' gravity so massive that it literally distorts everything around it, and thus a paper was written. No idea what the other paper was about, though.
@tylersick4329 ай бұрын
Christopher Nolan directed 3 of my top 5 movies Interstellar Batman the Dark Knight The Prestige The Wolf of Wallstreet Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith
@Butholesniffer694 ай бұрын
Nolan reacted rots?
@Butholesniffer694 ай бұрын
No wonder it was so good
@tylersick4324 ай бұрын
@@Butholesniffer69 The first 3 movies I listed are directed by Nolan
@Butholesniffer694 ай бұрын
@@tylersick432 ohhh top 3 we’re Nolan the last 2 we’re your last 2 In top 5
@tylersick4324 ай бұрын
@@Butholesniffer69 yep
@crazy4wavescoasters7413 ай бұрын
Interstellar is my favorite movie of all times! An awesome accomplishment, the story, the characters, the actings, the visuals, the effects and (of course!) the songs!
@rayeen69709 ай бұрын
I really love this movie one of my favorite Actually, and j absolutely loved your reaction to it. My new favorite reactors 🖤🖤
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you! We appreciate that!
@junefps_3 ай бұрын
I really enjoy watching you guys! great content and you both seem really down to earth
@jenkinsisaac918 ай бұрын
« Tesseract » is just what a 4-dimensional cube is called. We as humans can somewhat understand a 4th dimension, although not necessarily intuitively like we can in our normal world. You can see that there is still the length, width, and depth, but the repeating nature of the structure that shows different points in time of Murph’s room is that 4th dimension that wraps around to connect all those instances of the three dimensions. If you look up a mathematical drawn diagram of a tesseract it might make a little more sense. Lots to explain here but I hope I gave a good basic idea.
@justintorres5028 ай бұрын
Ms October caring about the love part and Mr October with the science part describes the dynamic of this movie perfectly. If you knew nothing about science this movie gives you an amazing parent child story full of heart, and if you're a big ol science dork then it's got you covered too. Favorite movie ✊🏼
@ESCLuciaSlovakia8 ай бұрын
To address your concern about time paradox: If the future humans live in a 5D world and time is not linear for them, then there is no cause and effect as we know it. There is no before and after. In our 3D universe, the time is one-directional, but the space no, we can move in the space forward, backward, to the left, to the right... All possible directions exist all the time for us, at the same time. If I move to the left, it doesn't mean that the other directions don't exist. They are still here, existing independently of my movement through them. And so there are no paradoxes in our movement in space. We are free to move in it and it is here, all of it. We can't ask: what was first, left or right? Up or down? Nothing was first, everything is at the same time. This is what non-linear time is for the 5D beings. They can move in time in any direction and it doesn't cause paradoxes, because all points in time do exist simultaneously. Just like all possible space exists all the time for us, for them all possible points in time exist all the time. No before, no after, no past, no future. They can see the whole history of the universe, past and future, and move to any point of it. Everything is just layed before them. The 5D beings are out of 3D time-space, so they can't really communicate with it, it won't come through. They need a 3D person to give the message - but a 3D person can't move in time like they can. That's why they create the tesseract, it has the time-free attribute of the 5D world converted into a 3D object (tesseract is actually a 4D cube), so a 3D person can enter it and use the freedom of time. But Cooper can't communicate either, because the tesseract is still out of our space-time, no communication would come through to young Murph. But the gravity can come through and Coop uses it to transfer his message into the 3D world. It's very, very complicated to explain, just like you said. But there is no paradox really, you just have to look at it from the 5D point of view and see that everything that happened and everything that will ever happen is already there, existing. So, everything in the history is happening at the same time. No before, no after. There is an official book explaining all the physics of this movie if you want more answers, written by Kip Thorne. Anyway, I loved your reaction and I really enjoyed watching it. Looking forward to the next one.
@pauljoey63348 ай бұрын
Great video thanks guys..one of my favourite films ever..its in my top.3 too..the music score is just perfect..performances are outstanding by main cast..it just gets better after each watch.. 🎉
@brettcloud85509 ай бұрын
Oh dawg I already know you're gonna dig this. The wormhole scene is so epic.
@boomercoco19 ай бұрын
Timestamp plz
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
it’s too good
@BigMoore12329 ай бұрын
I saw this in a imax theater in fort wayne indiana with my wife and it was the most emotional experiences we've ever had during a movie. I mean really everyone in the theater just sat there like 5 minutes after it was done because it was really overwhelming.
@fuzzy__dunlop8 ай бұрын
27:22 - don't worry, brother. Everyone cries during Interstellar.
@jermynryan22869 ай бұрын
Its a masterpiece
@CocaCasta8 ай бұрын
"Love is our species' contribution to the universe". Damn Mr. October, that is both incredibly deep and beautiful! Well done sir!
@hybrid.catastrophic.impact60713 ай бұрын
When you can react to Rush hour 1,2 and 3. You will absolutely enjoy Jackie Chan and Chris tucker. The movie is super hilarious and has plenty action packed scenes.
@titulopatitot9 ай бұрын
Now I demand for a Nolan marathon or any mind boggling films. I'm really enjoying ya'll perspectives in each movie reactions. Keep it up! Keep it real! ❤
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
where do we start? :)
@isaiah4668 ай бұрын
@@TheOctobersReact Inception
@portugalgamermanel34048 ай бұрын
58:00 Gargantua slows time for the Dad. giving time for the civilization and his daughter to find him, maybe took more than 50 years to find him. it was just a few minutes for him floating in space. but of course some things don't make sense or theories not proven, going to a black hole, has so much strength to destroy his ship, but he's human body was more resilient, okay movie :p
@dejavu20308 ай бұрын
Watch Inception which is also Christopher Nolan it's also about time and it's extremely emotional and epic
@mrmagnus4208 ай бұрын
When I saw this at the movie theater, it quickly jumped up into my 5 fav movies of all time. Just amazing in every way.
@CreeperBoyGamingyt9 ай бұрын
I love the soundtrack so much, it’s other-worldly
@vedantpatil63158 ай бұрын
FACTS:- They planted all those crops in real, they are not CGI. On millers plannet you can hear the ticking sound every 1.25 secs it represents 1 day spent on earth. Actually it has many more but i am bored to type
@isaiah4668 ай бұрын
Kip Thorne is a theoretical physicist and was the lead scientific consultant for this movie; he wrote a book titled "The Science of Interstellar" where he breaks down the science behind the movie. Given that you are interested in this kind of stuff, I'm sure that you will find it a fascinating read.
@RocZi8 ай бұрын
Very glad to see you two enjoyed a lot. That it awed you guys so much, that its joyful to watch your reaction. A very excellent part of why this movie is so powerful is the MUSIC. Fun Fact : Did you know that when Director Christopher Nolan asks Hans Zimmer to compose the song, Nolan chose not to provide Zimmer with a script or any plot details but instead gave Hans Zimmer an envelope containing one sheet of paper that told the story of a father leaving his child for work, and what it meant to be a father. Hans Zimmer, also a father, doesn't even know what movie or script it is going to be! They didn't discuss about movie, they only discuss about their children. Zimmer then spent a day composing the theme and then showed it to Nolan, and Nolan loved it. Zimmer says : “Nolan sat on my couch and I played him the piece. He paused for a second and said, 'I better make the movie now.'” So you can see that Nolan fits the movie to the music, the connection between the visual and the audio is so strong *chef kiss Since you have watched the movie, you can now check this concert out : kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z4rShJecp8dofa8
@sherbsmom8 ай бұрын
Thank you both for watching this movie. It was so enjoyable to watch with you. I was lucky enough to see it in the theater years ago. Again, thank you!
@wroot_lt8 ай бұрын
It's interesting you mentioned framing. Yeah, when i was watching it first time in cinema i have noticed it and every time i watch it again or reactions. Nolan does that so masterfully that makes his movies standout. By placing point of view on the objects moving, so you kind of riding that rocket yourself along with heroes instead of doing a standard thing of showing rocket going into sky from a point of view on the ground or from the side of the rocket. Puts you in the moment very well. Also showing things happening outside of a frame. Like their first experience with robot, when girl screams in the car. We only see her and light.
@spinningredchair80928 ай бұрын
"Hey dad.. you son of a bitch.." TEARS EVERY TIME
@Reypadd9 ай бұрын
Great movie, great reactions.
@PE4Doers8 ай бұрын
One part that escapes the technical descriptions, and provides a possible first 'spin' of the cycle, was that Plan 'B' was going to happen even if Coop didn't go on the mission. Everyone on Earth would have perished, but it would have still been possible for the seeds to eventually develop into the 'Future' us.
@georux67838 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your reactions. Thanks for being so relatable. Spot on.
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that thanks so much
@fredchester9215 ай бұрын
POSSIBLE ANSWER: On how one can file among the 5-dimensional tesseract to access the 2-dimensions (space/time) slices inside. I would illustrate it at it as a volume where inside all of space/time is represented as individual slices of time (represented by millions of glass panels that has perhaps a one-hour loop of the movie of that panel's contents playing, like in a KZbin video, over and over again) that is then placed next to the next, consecutive, slice of time (represented by another glass panel, playing another one-hour loop of time/space). All the glass panels set next to each other, like books on a shelf; SLICE A-001, A-002, A-003, etc. And, McConaughey could physically touch --- and access one particular glass panel, and enter it, somehow, and then manipulate the contents of that space/time which would then, after it was altered, automatically alter all the data from that period forward. So, it would be tricky to make any changes, but it would allow a fluid change of space/time going forward. If McConaughey could survive living in that space and accessing the panels (going in and out of some, and then flying across to alter ones 30 years later in time/space, then back to ones only a year after he left). Kinda cool. So, you could do what McConaughey did. Not sure how time would be measured from McConaughey's point of view, but that's my impression of that hypothetical model.
@Idltalk8 ай бұрын
Great reaction guys 👍 I think you should watch Arrival, (2016). It's also a mind blowing movie.
@TheOctobersReact3 ай бұрын
we watched it!
@erod90889 ай бұрын
Greatest daddy-daughter movie ever.
@SixFour03919 ай бұрын
“Fly Away Home” ain’t a bad one either!
@SkidmoreTx8 ай бұрын
Nolan + Zimmer = Masterpiece
@nashantikeriana78248 ай бұрын
I've watched this movie twice and yet im still watching with yall and crying along! It's just that good.
@TheOctobersReact8 ай бұрын
❤️ this!
@Charlton_Kekston9 ай бұрын
I love this movie so much that I enjoy watching reacters for this movie specifically and every time I do I see something that I missed the first time. This movie is the GOAT, and a must rewatch! Try watching it again in a month without the camera, trust me. Also @ 11:54 and 21:01 I loved how you guys discussed these parts as many other reacters gloss over these very important explanations in the plot. 👍 This movie is so emotional and this is also how I decide if I subscribe to a newer reaction channel... If you cry then I subscribe, so you guys have earned my subscription!
@TheOctobersReact9 ай бұрын
thank you so much for the awesome comment! we had to talk to each other about it to be on the same page lol!
@janisfarhat99358 ай бұрын
„Love is our species contribution to the universe“.... Bro, what a line!
@pasttimes818 ай бұрын
Michio Kaku’s scientific belief in extraterrestrial beings, specifically Ommuamua that passed by earth a few years ago completely opened my mind and scientific research field. That man LITERALLY changed my life
@LeethLee18 ай бұрын
5:40 "She's so smart" "... yeah but she's talking to a bookshelf" 😂
@drknralh86248 ай бұрын
As a big fan of this movie now that you are watching it and now that it's been out for like 20 hours I'm surprised nobody's pointed out the small detail. The point that I'm at now and y'all's reaction is where they're fixing to go to the planet that for every hour they spend there is 7 years. If you listen to the soundtrack while they're on that planet there's a clicking every I think it's 30 seconds which is a day passing so every click is one day and it happens every 30 seconds
@masti7339 ай бұрын
Besides the story, the incredible score and fantastic acting. The way they merge science with the metaphyical is what does it for me. As Brand said, humans didn't invent love, and it is observable and powerful. It is part of the universe itself in one way or another. That love, combined with gravity and some near divine level intervention from the future plan B colonists, enables them to enact plan A was just fantastic. Every time i hear old Murph say ' because my dad promised me', it really tugs at the heartstrings. It's a beautiful movie. Great reaction guys!
@michaelw62228 ай бұрын
Awesome review. Really enjoyed it. And like so many others, I just can't say enough good stuff about this movie.
@Boomer502CG8 ай бұрын
I think the hardest hitting part of this movie is the short reunion with Murph. It really put emphasis on how Murph was only holding on to see her dad one more time, and once he kept his promise of returning, he had to immediately go. Nolan did a great job of building their relationship to make it hit as hard as possible.
@dsfddsgh9 ай бұрын
Now that you've seen this movie the next sci-fi movie you should watch is the Martian.
@notkg8 ай бұрын
when they were on the water planet, there is ticking heard in the background. Each tick is 1.25 seconds apart and signifies a day going by on earth
@SciFiCatGuy8 ай бұрын
Once upon a time, Interstellar and Game of Thrones had a secret love child, and it was named, The Expanse. The original concept for The Expanse was for an MMPRPG, but after doing immense and immaculate research the co-authors, Ty Frank and Daniel Abraham, realized that wasn't going to happen due to funding, so they turned it into a tabletop RPG. After playing the tabletop game with friends, including George R.R. Martin, (Ty Frank was his assistant), they had a cool storyline and characters, so they turned it into a novel series, (9 novels, 7 novellas, and 2 short stories.) The novel series was so popular it was made into a TV series, (now on Amazon,) which was so popular it was made into the Telltale RPG you are playing, bringing it full circle back to the original concept. (The game, btw, takes place before the events in the books/show.)
@JWFas8 ай бұрын
During the water planet scene, there is a ticking sound every 1.4 seconds. Each tick is the passing of one day on Earth (from the time dilation).
@andresleimon8 ай бұрын
Oh... the bootstrap paradox. Well pointed. Keep up the good work. All the love and support from Brasil. Godbless. ❤
@jamesmoore40039 ай бұрын
When Matt Damon blew up part of the ship….they HAD to attempt to dock to the main ship bc all of the plan B human embryos were on there….if they lost those then humankind would come to an end….
@magix02218 ай бұрын
It wasn't millers planet that had the crazy gravitational pull that caused the time dilation, it was because of how close the planet was to the black hole, as it oribited the black hole instead of a star. Closer you are to the event horizon of a black hole, the faster time moves for you, but you look slower to someone looking from afar, you actually come to a complete stop before ever crossing the event horizon to anyone observing but to you, you just fall right in (General Relativity). The black hole is also responsible for the massive tidal forces we see on millers planet.