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@katherinemc38509 ай бұрын
😁
@thewhatsupbros49119 ай бұрын
next up, The Martian
@4Everlast9 ай бұрын
Speaking of "why lie something about that" oh there's plenty of fkn reasons my guy. Plenty and then some.
@Cadinho939 ай бұрын
"Because my dad promised me." Instant tears every time. Also, no matter when I see it or how many times I have seen it already, the "years of messages" scene gets me every damn time, especially if you remember that Coop lost a grandson in a matter of seconds.
@Sandlund939 ай бұрын
Yeah, those scenes trigger my tears even while skipping through a reaction video. To me, this is the best movie ever made.
@j0hn007 ай бұрын
The lost time scene absolutely butchered me every time before I had a kid. Now that I've had a child for 3 years... I tear up just thinking about this scene
@thedarkknight22219 ай бұрын
*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!
@LilTechCricket9 ай бұрын
Even the genetic biodiversity of the colony that Brandt briefly mentions. That's CRUCIAL to prevent birth defects, genetic mutations, and other issues that come from a lack of biodiversity.
@genreassassin4519 ай бұрын
Regarding your time dilation statement, stargate sg-1 featured time dilation related to black hole proximity in season 2 episode 16 which came out in 1998.
@coyotelong43499 ай бұрын
Never has a sci-fi film used love and emotion so effectively as an integral part of the story. There is no tearjerker sci-fi movie like Interstellar lol
@greggmaxx9 ай бұрын
Time is passage along a field of gravity. Imagine an elastic blanket made of squares, like a quilt. The denser an object on the blanket, the further it sinks into the blanket, meaning that more stretching occurs between the squares. Not an exact explanation but definitely helps me explain it to everyday people
@thedarkknight22219 ай бұрын
@@greggmaxx THAT! That is the best analogy to time dilation via gravity I have ever heard.
@stefanhuddleston68169 ай бұрын
One line in the film sums this movie up, "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."
@Anonymou5Prime9 ай бұрын
Supposedly, each tick in the “mountains” soundtrack on miller’s planet represents one day on earth passing by.
@johnnyrocket16857 ай бұрын
This is correct. Each tick is 1.25 seconds in total, rather than 1 second. Each tick counts as a full day on earth, so every single minute they spent on Miller’s planet cost them 48 days on earth. 48 days per minute times 60 minutes in an hour comes out to 2,880 days. Which, in reality, is 7.88 years. Therefore, because they spent a total of 3hours17mins due to waiting for the ship to dry out, comes out to about 23 years, 5 months for 3 hours, plus 17 minutes, which put the total at 23 years, 8 months, and a handful of days.
@CeirraNY9 ай бұрын
She didn’t make that colony…the guy she loved, Edmunds, did…she just landed and found he died…remember he was sent years before they left..what we were seeing was her burying him
@honthewaffle15519 ай бұрын
Not to mention the slingshot around the blackhole. He could’ve very well been alive if they had gone there even after Miller’s planet. The same way they found Mann
@Drew1701D9 ай бұрын
She did make the colony, probably had Case help land everything. Wolff was only there in a discovery vehicle. I think they only landed one component on Mann's planet before they found out he was just scamming them. Landing on Miller's planet and slingshotting around Gargantua cost them a total of 73 + years so Wolff had long died of natural causes
@mig61689 ай бұрын
No, edmunds did not, he was sent here just for a reconnaissance mission. Only the endurance mission have the eggs...
@CeirraNY9 ай бұрын
@@mig6168 who said anything about eggs? She did not build that all in a suit just now realizing the planet had breathable air... Make sense and think before you respond
@mig61689 ай бұрын
@@CeirraNY Don't be so angry & take a look at the state of the edmund's ship & the flag. He is dead since a long time, near 90 years when she arrived. And everything is still standing here like new ??? And she has CASE with her...
@LibertarianJRT9 ай бұрын
The other guy (her man) was there for 50 years before she got there. So for the rest of his life he prepared the area for the eventual arrival of the rest of humanity.
@HelloMellowXVI9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! 🙏🏾
@teajai459 ай бұрын
I think it's also worth mentioning that Edmunds did not die of natural causes. After prepping his planet for humanity he went into cryosleep, and he and his landing pod were both caught in a rockslide. I've heard this is confirmed in the official novelization of Interstellar, in addition to Edmund's crumpled Ranger you see in the ending montage.
@johnnyrocket16857 ай бұрын
@@teajai45This is correct. 10 years passed from the time that Edmonds first left and when Cooper, brand and the rest first go through the wormhole. They then spend 3 hours and 17 minutes on Miller’s Plant, which equates to 23 years, eight months and a handful of days. Then, it took them about 1 year to get to Mann’s planet and have him attack them. From there, Brand then went into hibernation for a total of 50 years while the ship autopiloted itself to Edmund’s planet. . So in total, a minimum of 83 years of time passed from when Edmund’s first got to his planet. But this doesn’t take into account any potential time dilation Edmund’s went through. Once he verified the planet was genuinely habitable for human beings, he began the construction of a settlement for about a few dozen people, including farm plots for growing food, shelter, water supplies, etc. Then he sent a signal to NASA back on earth and settled into the Long Nap. While waiting for anyone to possibly find him and awaken him; his ship was caught in a devastating rock slide, which crushed his hibernation chamber and killed him.
@mig61687 ай бұрын
In fact it's way more ! 10 years + 23 (miller) + 51 (black hole)
@Alchemistic889 ай бұрын
"Epic music for stuff that isn't that epic" while a 5000 foot wave is coming at them is CRAZY bruh 😂
@ot7biasedmashups8 ай бұрын
I was like??? We seeing the same scene? Like you could feel the terror of something so insanely huge your brain doesn't even want to comprehend it 😂
@cyberpunkspacejams9 ай бұрын
I think the best thing about this score is that when Christopher Nolan asked Hans Zimmer to compose the music, he never told him it was a science fiction film, because he didnt want that to influence his composition, so he told him simply it was a story about a father trying to connect with his daughter. Even without knowing this was going to be sci-fi, Zimmer absolutely nailed it, easily one of his best scores.
@ot7biasedmashups8 ай бұрын
It works because that's what the movie is about. It's not just beautiful visuals on a bare story. It's so full of heart which is exactly what makes it so phenomenal.
@DARTHTAKRA9 ай бұрын
Relativity is probably the most scariest part about space for me. Just imagine going way for a weekend trip coming back and your 10-year-old daughter is dying from old age. How does that not absolutely blow your mind
@anthonycollins23839 ай бұрын
Bro, that movie hits so hard. It does everything right. The plot, the writing, the characters, the tone, the acting, the ending. Everything. Everything about it works. Oh, and the music. My goodness! This is one Han Zimmer’s best scores. It makes the scenes so emotional. And of course, great reaction, Mell!
@starjackson33859 ай бұрын
I don’t have kids but I can’t imagine not being able to be there for all the important moments. That scene when Cooper sees and listens to the messages… heartbreaking and makes me cry every time. Great reaction!
@LB_ThaKing9 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite movies, bro. I gotta say the first time I realized who the composer of all the movie scores that I liked was watching your other reactions when you point out Han Zimmer... ❤
@dylandaly20029 ай бұрын
Hans Zimmer’s score is my favorite of all time, the music in this film gives goosebumps every time! A Nolan Masterpiece!!!!
@Conceptually_yours9 ай бұрын
At the beginning, when the different people were talking about all the dust and that they were putting plates upside down, those were actual interviews from people who survived the dustbowl in 1930.
@DaleKingProfile9 ай бұрын
They were clips from the Ken Burns documentary on the dust bowl
@TechieindahHood9 ай бұрын
The message of love prevailing across dimension hits me SO hard 😭😭 and while I haven’t seen Oppenheimer, I will say that Ludwig Göransson is a strong competitor to Hans Zimmer’s scores because what he did for Oppenheimer is absolutely gorgeous. Also, still hoping to eventually see you react to Avatar the Way of Water 👀
@therealneal30349 ай бұрын
I've cried at movies before, but Interstellar is the first movie where I had to pause and let the emotions pass. Multiple times at that. (I watched it for the first time on Sunday)
@allier18679 ай бұрын
the 'ticking' on miller's planet... ugh i get chills everytime.
@plaid119 ай бұрын
The reason for the 74% on Rotten Tomatoes is because it can be hard for some people to follow. It doesn’t matter how good of a storyline or acting there is, if you can’t follow and/or understand it, it’s difficult to appreciate the good
@lilscenechick19958 ай бұрын
It’s definitely a film made for people who know scientific terms and theories more than the average person.
@DeltownAtze8 ай бұрын
@@lilscenechick1995 very true. when i showed the movie to my people, i had to explain every couple minutes what happened.. kinda frustrating when they dont understand or have an open mind
@sergiykud9 ай бұрын
i like how they are talking about Love as measurable and Cooper takes an near impossible risk just to get back to his family. id say thats measurable.
@MrAMP15209 ай бұрын
Edmunds was part of the original 12 settlers, so he didn't have resources to expand a Colony but set up a base. The reason he's dead when Brand gets there is because they lost so much time leaving the ice planet, her and Coop are over a hundred years old.
@ryanb-ol2pf9 ай бұрын
Hope youre doing well.🙏 you helped me through the passing of my dad, and i wanted to say thank you, for everything you do and all your hard work. Been a sub for years, its awesome to see you pass 200k subs! Much love and respect
@roddo19559 ай бұрын
Your dad's passing and Mel reaching over 200k subscribers..... If they ever plan a mission to some other dimension',,,, i'm going. i dont want to be on this planet anymore. Priorities and values are so skewed nowadays
@the_nikster19 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say it's about love conquering science, per se, but more that love is as consequential and tangible as science so we should trust it. thanks for the reaction, Mello!
@Tavo-TronАй бұрын
This movie is 𝗣𝗛𝗘𝗡𝗢𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗔𝗟, an absolute 𝗠𝗔𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗥𝗣𝗜𝗘𝗖𝗘, my all-time favorite movie! I had the privilege of watching it in the theater, and let me tell you, it was a mind blowing experience. The visuals, the score, everything about it was pure cinematic magic. I heard they might bring it back to theaters for its 10 year anniversary, and if that happens, I’ll be there without a doubt! It’s not just a movie; it’s a cinematographic treasure by Christopher Nolan, who, in my opinion, is the best Movie Director of this era. If you can see it on the big screen, don’t miss it!
@leonardolara90499 ай бұрын
They applied the actual equations for a black hole to a VFX software and that’s what it made. So cool
@louismonnichii76199 ай бұрын
What's really cool is that when the crew is on Miller's planet, every tick in the music is equal to one day that passed or something like that. I saw the documentary on the music, and what they did was genius
@tank4ever9 ай бұрын
30:50 Matt Damon's character knows they need the ship to go to the next planet because they can't survive on this one, but Coop is planning to use it to go back through the wormhole to get home since he thinks they are setting up the colony & won't need the ship anymore.
@lilscenechick19958 ай бұрын
Idk how or why this went over my head every time I’ve rewatched this film, I never understood why he did that. Thank you. I only understood that he lied about his planet being inhabitable so he could get rescued, and planned to sabotage whoever stayed behind. Pretty evil and selfish.
@Luna-cn4pj9 ай бұрын
Fun fact the corn field at the beginning was grown for this movie and it looks beautiful for the shots at the beginning
@MichaelJohnson-ct6jp9 ай бұрын
Great reaction man! One of the saddest things about this movie to me is the fact that he never sees his son again🙈 his son died thinking his father abandoned them and just murph actually sees him again
@locustkllr9 ай бұрын
He thought that the last time we saw him, maybe. But then in the ensuing years, his sister solved the math equation with data from the conditions inside a black hole, which she could not possibly have, unless she was telling the truth about their dad and the watch. Then, presumably, the teams at NASA used that equation to harness the powers of gravity and get the population of Earth, or most of it, off the planet and into self sustaining space stations away from the blight, where they could survive. We don't know when the son died, but i would guess he saw enough of these miraculous things to at least have some faith that his father's mission suceeded, saved them all, and that he might still be out there somewhere.
@subsume79044 ай бұрын
The son is one of the people in the interviews, he would know it was his dad who saved them because of Murph
@filmfreakbecky9 ай бұрын
YAAASSSS MEL!!! FEEEEEEL the PAIN!!! 😫 this movie is too deep than it has a right to be
@HelloMellowXVI9 ай бұрын
Lmao Becky! I Didn't Know It Was This Deep!
@michaelangelocostello25999 ай бұрын
The movies, depiction of a black hole was so accurate, that it almost matched what was found a few years ago of what a black hole looks like
@fgrillo299 ай бұрын
"That's relativity, folks." The ticking clock on Miller's Planet gets me every time. The time counting down between waves. The time passing on Earth. It's an amazing scene with a brilliant score. Fantastic movie. Gets better every time I see it. Nolan, the actors, Zimmer and the crew really knocked this one out of the park.
@4523bgb9 ай бұрын
Bro. Starman. Chef's kiss.
@TheGeneralGrievous199 ай бұрын
As someone who is really worried & fearful of stuff like passage of time, getting older, losing loved ones or even meaningful things, Interstellar hit home when I first watched it and really moved me. 🚀 It is my personal favourite Nolan movie next to The Dark Knight. 🦇 And You SHOULD definetly watch Oppenheimer, I saw it at the theaters, thought it was great. 💥
@egility9999 ай бұрын
“The Dream is Collapsing” My Favorite Hans Zimmer Music Track Ever!
@Giekox9 ай бұрын
They put equations from theoretical black holes from astrophysicists into an engine and got the rendered black hole. it’s accurate. they actually discovered lots about black holes because of the render.
@renanmarques51517 ай бұрын
The way they did Gargantula is just amazing. They asked for a scientist to help them to develop a blackhole using real calculations and formulas in a simulation software (if im not mistaken), so what you see is pretty much how a blackhole actually is. Edit: Forgot to mention, after he went into it, now that's just imagination, we dont know whats there yet.
@The_Curious_Cat7 ай бұрын
The black hole on this movie is a simulation made with the data we had at the time. It's the most accurate representation of what a black hole might look like.
@Helldog69 ай бұрын
5 Minutes in and I already love this reaction. You are correct, Hans Zimmer is my GOAT for Movie Soundtracks. Dune, Interstellar, The Dark Knight, Inception, Man of Steel, Gladiator, The Last Samurai, Blade Runner 2049, etc. The guy is untouchable to me. He may not have the bombastic or "stuck in your head" songs like John Williams, but the evokes emotion like nobody else IMO.
@spartan_warrior59279 ай бұрын
I have two boys and I’m sorry it may seem selfish but if either of them told me they don’t want me to go then humanity would just have to be doomed. With zero regrets.
@Avarice219 ай бұрын
weak
@Josherew9 ай бұрын
Well, you would have killed your children
@Anonymou5Prime9 ай бұрын
@@Avarice21simple reply from a simple mind
@davobands9 ай бұрын
@@Avarice21you say weak because nobody loves you
@Kyubii019 ай бұрын
It’s a choice you gotta make. Some people aren’t meant for greatness, some people don’t see the big picture. But just know you not making that choice eventually dooms your kids. The man making the choice to go into space to save the world(his kids future) is objectively more important for the big picture as his kids not dying early when they could possibly live full and beautiful lives not full of dust in their lungs
@portugalgamermanel34042 ай бұрын
23:40 love is a variable too. With love, has faith and trust. Love makes the data more truth. In this movie if people choose love, would have a better ending
@amaanallen58649 ай бұрын
I saw somewhere on the water planet with the background music with the ticking was one day per tick
@juice_box_jax9 ай бұрын
I never saw it as love over science. More a celebration of both being humanity’s greatest assets and they can work with each other for the betterment of all.
@jonahpuls86718 ай бұрын
No Time For Caution is one of the best pieces of music of all time.
@Tommi4629 ай бұрын
Hans Zimmer has always been a great film composer, but in my opinion this is his greatest work. It's fairly simple too, but for this film it is just perfection.
@iamsheep9 ай бұрын
It is implied that the colony at the end is the future of humanity, who comes back in time and dimension to save humanity in the past. Classic paradox.
@TheBlond499 ай бұрын
Hans Zimmer is definitely the best composer of all time, my top works of his are Interstellar, Man of Steel, Gladiator. The science in this movie is pretty accurate, the black hole Nolan dn his team created was pretty closed to the one found recently.
@sarahjane86guitar9 ай бұрын
My sister, brother in law and me drove 45mins to see this in IMAX opening day and it was beyond worth it. It elevated the experience.
@justmelv239 ай бұрын
Ugh i was years late watching so missed it in theaters. And soooo mad at myself galaxy flashback cinema just showed it jan 21 and 24th and I forgot
@OrangeTestament9 ай бұрын
Instantly my favorite reaction to this movie 🙌🏻 Simply because of all your acknowledgments of Zimmer’s score. The reaction to “No Time For Caution” was amazing, haha 😁
@goanna839 ай бұрын
My favourite Hans Zimmer score is hands down this movie, which also happens to be the reason why Hans Zimmer is my favourite movie music composer. Watching this movie in an Imax theatre for the first time was worthwhile my greatest honour. Such an emotional masterpiece. Not sure if you have seen it yet, but would love to see you react to 2001: A Space Odyssey
@bookxnerd5249 ай бұрын
I watched this movie in my astronomy class during my senior year of high school and absolutely loved it. The music and the cinematography are just so gorgeous. The scene with the messages is so heartbreaking; it was hard trying to keep myself together during that scene. It is one of my favorite movies ever now.
@XLeon_S_KennedyX9 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The ticking sound in every 1.25 seconds in that water planet means 1 Earth day has gone by.
@ryanb-ol2pf9 ай бұрын
Black Hawk Down is my favorite Hans Zimmer, over 20 years later it still gives me chills and makes me cry... Its just so beautiful.
@PizzaHutCEO9 ай бұрын
Your love for this soundtrack is so contagious and so relatable
@markeyiszra9 ай бұрын
I remember i was gonna watch Rurouni Kenshin 2/3 (both movie release on a same month) but since my mom doesn't like hyper violence movie,she choose Interstellar and i was kinda not interested seeing that,but after seeing that movie it was worth it. The music,the emotion,and full on sci-fi scene with full on theory was amazing and i'm glad i'm experience one of the most mind blowing movie. Also shotout to Hans Zimmer to make the music more grander and wider for making this movie. In my college,one of my friend play the song when playing Starfield. And that Matt Damon cameo coming out of nowhere and this movie release before The Martian. I always think back then both movie have connection.
@4523bgb9 ай бұрын
After watching this movie so many times, the ending gets easier to understand. The data gathered from the black hole pretty much solved how to move gravity through time and space.
@Invisinet9 ай бұрын
Would love to see you watch Hacksaw Ridge! I don't usually cry watching movies, but I love to laugh during them, and that movie hit me deep on both ends haha.
@carloscandido31769 ай бұрын
The interesting part about this movie is that the sci-fi only starts when he fall inside the black hole. But even that, even the way he communicates with the past is using gravity. And so far the scientific community agreed that gravity is the only thing that can travel through space/time. Amazing movie.
@brettcloud85509 ай бұрын
Nolan worked closely with astrophysicists because he wanted to get the black hole right. He actually helped them discover something in real life regarding black holes.
@YouOnlyIiveTwice9 ай бұрын
There's a show called 'For All Mankind' that spans over 4 decades starting from the '60s and basically shows how the world would have looked if the Space Race between the Soviets and Americans never ended after landing on the moon. It might be sci-fi, but there's a lot of logical thinking based on real world science put into the show's story just like this movie that you'd probably like. Just a suggestion. Anyways, I love the reaction. Your channel is easily in my top 3 favorite react channels on YT. Keep up the great content, my dude
@preciousmerriweather9 ай бұрын
I think the music more so reflects the feelings related to what’s versus the action in the movie.
@Mk7Poorsche7 ай бұрын
Love is a gravitational force. This movie is such a masterpiece and Nolan's best work IMHO.
@funtourhawk9 ай бұрын
Definitely in my top 5 movies of all time...just insane how well Nolan pulled it off, pretty much perfect
@tomasbeha16459 ай бұрын
Dr..Brand's guy also aged quite a bit more than her, as the whole crew spend 23 years on visiting the first "water planet". That's why she's at his grave.
@spartyontop9 ай бұрын
Have you seen Dunkirk? It’s a World War 2 movie by Christopher Nolan as well and personally I think it’s one of his best. People say it’s boring but it’s not all. You should watch it.
@leosarmiento48239 ай бұрын
As you take the time to watch for details, the pieces will start to come together. This wasn't so much love conquering science. It was more love and science working together.
@PBandJwithBacon9 ай бұрын
The black hole was not an improve, it was a gathering of data to what a black hole would look like,Neil deGrasse Tyson actually consulted on it to get it as close as possible. The picture that was released of the black hole actually matches this model quite close too. #Science!
@マシュードーラン9 ай бұрын
I was able to see part of this soundtrack performed by Hans and his huge group of musicians live a few years back and…goosebumps! It’s even more energetic and incredible to feel it in person! I got misty eyed for sure haha
@jaydenbrooks79139 ай бұрын
Get this man to 300k subs he has to watch 300 as a special
@serial929899 ай бұрын
Has Mell seen 300?🤔
@jaydenbrooks79139 ай бұрын
@@serial92989 I don't so
@iamProtoZoen9 ай бұрын
Interstellar is my favorite movie of all time. Ive seen it so many times it just does so many things right and hits the right spots everytime.
@Kyubii019 ай бұрын
I gotta disagree . It’s not that love conquers all. But that love is an actual scientific variable that can be used with science . Love is science or love with science solved the problem. Especially when in science in our reality doesn’t have emotions equated into it
@JayMoneyRico5 ай бұрын
Hans did the main theme without knowing it was a movie about space, thatts why all the songs are so emotional. Nolan just told him the general plot and gave him a small part of the script, so hans thought it was a father daughter type movie. the behind the scenes stuff on the dvd is super interesting
@absolutebuffoon16799 ай бұрын
i saw this in the theater at 14 and rewatching it as an adult destroyed me, just thought it was a cool space movie back then
@ellehcimbelle9 ай бұрын
reactors are always dissing Brand's speech about love when she was right in the end!
@jbrat1229 ай бұрын
27:53 their ship is carrying all them embryos to help populate the new planet
@evanhayward15026 ай бұрын
Favourite Hans Zimmer score? Interstellar, Inception, Pirates of the Caribbean. In that order. A modern score starring a pipe organ and string orchestra. Incredibly beautiful.
@dfa33668 ай бұрын
Great reaction. I think people miss that his son's son...his grandson died. This movie is mind blowing. The thought of space travel to another galaxy is beyond what we can currently do. Neptune is the furthest planet from the sun and from Earth to Neptune for a probe it would take 18 years at our current technology. And Neptune is still in our neighborhood.
@Shale09109 ай бұрын
Yes..Christopher Nolan did work with someone on the movie.. Considering how ominous black holes continue to be within the cosmos, a lot of Interstellar's science is grounded in theoretical physics. Guiding Christopher Nolan was Caltech theoretical physicist Kip Thorne, who served as the filmmaker's official science consultant and an executive producer on the movie.
@pricemoore20229 ай бұрын
Awesome reaction of my Christopher Nolan movie!!!!😊😊😊😊
@tazepat0017 ай бұрын
I loved it when you were like "Yooooo" that is the best scene in the movie and I felt the exact same way. That music really did the punch
@jbrat1229 ай бұрын
34:56 the black hole in this film was proved to be pretty accurate.
@BabySpiegel9 ай бұрын
Watching this in theaters was something else and if you know, you know
@stanperry64469 ай бұрын
The woodblock beat in the music on the water planet represents that passage of one day on earth with every beat
@RocketRoketto8 ай бұрын
Timothée said he cried when he saw the finished movie cause the majority of his scenes were cut.
@christinemclaurin26319 ай бұрын
Great reaction! Even though this was a re-watch for you, it felt like a first time reaction. Speaks to your growth as a person. ❤❤❤
@vulpii81359 ай бұрын
the movie is a masterclass in how to build tension, emotion, everything.
@R2d2..7 ай бұрын
34:40 we have an image of a black hole and it was taken years after the movie was made. And it looks like in the movie. So they did a good job actually with showing how a black hole looks like.
@_Wild_Wanderlust_9 ай бұрын
To your question, my fav Hans Zimmer sountrack is "Lost but Won" from the movie Rush! I listen to it while I'm doing cardio. Also, you should check out the movie, Rush.
@Absolynth9 ай бұрын
Hi Mel, so to answer your question, have we seen black holes? No, as with black holes there IS nothing to see, however they can be identified by observing distorted or warped galaxies. This warping is calling 'lensing', wherein light itself is affected by the gravity field of a black hole between us and the observable galaxy. Kinda like when you look through a full glass of water, and everything appears distorted.
@MikeB128009 ай бұрын
If NASA didn’t land on the moon, Russia would be the first to call them out. The fact that they didn’t just proves that we landed on it.
@youmadbro77339 ай бұрын
“How you gonna start a colony… three men, one woman…that’s messed up” That messed up story kind of sounds familiar… (Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel) hmmmm
@fangirlalliecat9 ай бұрын
He missed the multiple times that human embryos/eggs being plan B was mentioned
@miguelmontenegro79 ай бұрын
"The Martian" was After this movie...
@HelloMellowXVI9 ай бұрын
I know that....
@tazepat0018 ай бұрын
This movie did have an advisor named Kipp Thorn and he helped direct it. Thats why everything is as accurate as can be
@bryancomer1984Ай бұрын
with regard to scientific jargon and general understanding, there are a few things that are a little bit off but most of them are pretty acceptable "artistic liberty" but this film brought on the world's foremost expert on black holes when they went to animate it, he basically provided the CGI team with the information and they made it appear. This film also released BEFORE we had an image of a black hole in space, and it was quite stunning to see that, though grainy and hard to make details out, absolutely lined up PERFECTLY with it. One of the cooler moments to have happen from movie vs reality, sick AF.
@Dragon_5th-RegenerationАй бұрын
Have you watched the behind the scenes interview with Hans Zimmer? Hans Zimmer chose the organ to represent man. To make an organ work, it needs air; it needs to "breathe".
@hackroots028 ай бұрын
Miller's planet scene was crazy the ticking represents a day passing, plus the gravity 130% of earth no wonder Doyle die, but the fact they could had rescue or met Miller minutes before they landed. Tars - Bill Irwin, Case - Josh Stewart.
@BlondeBoyJacob9 ай бұрын
Fuck the water planet that’s my biggest fear of all time fuck that shit
@Drew1701D9 ай бұрын
Movie of the century for sure... you really want to enjoy it, find any local IMAX theater, chances are they are showing it at least once a month. I know the IMAX and the Air & Space Museum in Chantilly VA does. Seeing it on IMAX puts it at a whole other level. There is an Interstellar sub reddit that has people tracking what IMAX theaters are still playing it..... along with Inception :)
@ReactWithZW8 ай бұрын
Just started my reaction channel and needed some great reactors to subscribe to! I have been in pure heaven since discovering your channel! Thanks for the entertaining content 😂!
@MinimalAesthetics9 ай бұрын
Anne Hathaway’s character Brand doesn’t go into the black hole FYI… Cooper and TARS do to lighten the load and help Brand conserve fuel so she can fly the spaceship to Edmond’s planet, they use the black hole to slingshot though if that’s what you’re saying. Interstellar helped evolve scientific understanding of black holes, they created such accurate computer models for the movie using the Hollywood budget that it that helped scientists studying the real thing!
@supdawg25599 ай бұрын
This is one i was waiting on Mello!! Amazing movie