The 23years scene broke my heart, i feel so sorry for the man alone, 23 years, in a spaceship.
@mounir_11785 жыл бұрын
Just to eventually die It’s mad
@smashit44655 жыл бұрын
@@mounir_1178 Ikr
@jemuelmongado50305 жыл бұрын
He had TARS though. A better company than most humans.
@Young_Dab5 жыл бұрын
23 years with no sex... that's no way to live
@severussnape80405 жыл бұрын
@@Young_Dab indeed😔✊
@JM-xy2nl6 жыл бұрын
i was literally shook when he got to the fifth dimension and we find out he was the ghost, it changed my whole perspective of the movie and blew my mind. This film was amazing and i cant believe i only just watched it now 4 almost 5 years later
@mrsuperselenio56945 жыл бұрын
I feel sad for you brother.... You missed a great experience on theaters
@LCc4fam5 жыл бұрын
Better late than never as some say.
@Suckyourmum5405 жыл бұрын
Fucking hell this film is next level I just watched it again aswell damn I was 12 when this first came out and watched in the cinema and didnt really understand it (mind blown)
@Ghostin275 жыл бұрын
I just watched it this day!
@nonoyjtv17245 жыл бұрын
Just watched it now. It was long overdue!
@164hozey6 жыл бұрын
“Don’t let me leave Murph” that scene legit almost made me cry
@eastonkerr63646 жыл бұрын
do people actually cry in movies nowadays or are you just trying to get your point across?
@Rainbowbrainco6 жыл бұрын
@@eastonkerr6364 Why wouldn't people still cry?
@eastonkerr63646 жыл бұрын
@@Rainbowbrainco it just doesn't make sense for me for people to cry at a movie, that is all.
@johnsmith48116 жыл бұрын
@@eastonkerr6364 Two questions. 1) Do you have children? 2) If so, do you love them? If you can answer to both in the positive, then you'll understand hozeyy's comment.
@AndyRock16 жыл бұрын
ALMOST? I cried hearing the music again! lmao
@Jacob_frye5 жыл бұрын
I wish if I can just erase this movie completely from my memory so I can watch it all over again and get to experience "the first watching it" again and keep erasing it and rewatching it indefinitely..
@arjun888884 жыл бұрын
Best comment 💯
@justanotheracc16784 жыл бұрын
Oof i really felt that
@izaanahmed92994 жыл бұрын
That's inception for you my friend.
@Jacob_frye4 жыл бұрын
I just watched this masterpiece again yesterday for the 14th time with my friend and after the film ended he left without saying a word not even a good bye..
@meerule4 жыл бұрын
perhaps you should experience a different Christopher Nolan movie
@Mridul.scentman6 жыл бұрын
This movie and its music changed my perspective towards Life. This movie is ahead of its time.
@marduk-z82846 жыл бұрын
Amen to that! 🙏🏼
@dukebristow32166 жыл бұрын
mridul chopra i know right
@granthoover90456 жыл бұрын
I keep telling people we won’t know how great this movie is for a few more decades. It sounds dumb but even aesthetically it’s brilliant. There’s no cheesy CGI heads-up-displays that’ll look comical in 10 years. Everything is very utilitarian. Cooper writes on a damn whiteboard for Christ’s sake. It looks like stuff NASA would actually build. That stuff will age very very well in time.
@buddymack96066 жыл бұрын
Yes indeed. Great music, wonderful story, believable effects, good acting... I really enjoyed watching Interstellar.
@Authoravarndal6 жыл бұрын
Lay down the weed dude.. It was a horrible movie.
@markcruz90675 жыл бұрын
“Because my dad promised me..” I’m a dad myself..it gets me everytime..😭
@sauceaddict95695 жыл бұрын
Ya
@jonathanw15675 жыл бұрын
That part is super tough if your a dad and i am, so i did tear up...
@HarryNicNicholas5 жыл бұрын
i've set my son the task of inventing the matter transmitter, just for the record.
@BryanRodriguez-ml1vd5 жыл бұрын
You’re not the only dad
@ApatheticPyrite5 жыл бұрын
Joe Bryant When I heard this line I just couldn’t... I know parents in my family that lost their two son and one daughter.... That and my mom told me these kind of sentences so many times.
@codychristian826 жыл бұрын
I cry every time I watch it. Best movie ever. 11/10
@jacobfranklin8206 жыл бұрын
I balled like a baby!
@ron_dee186 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@garyps016 жыл бұрын
Me too. This hit an emotional sweet spot not sure why. When he he reunites with his daughter the damn burst forth. I too was puzzled by the 5th dimensional place he goes and a part of me rejected that is was a man made place.
@billybats2706 жыл бұрын
cant count huh
@jskyler54226 жыл бұрын
I have a 4 year old son. EVERY SINGLE TIME I watch that 23 years later scene, I cry and I am a 25 year old man lol
@valentinaiakovidou75945 жыл бұрын
You can't just create a sci fi movie that includes drama and explains some laws of physik- Interstellar: Hold my tesseract
@lilchopan84185 жыл бұрын
*Christopher Nolan and friends
@paritosharya43985 жыл бұрын
Why is that so man. And if is it then why don't u go to that platform and start creating Ur ideas in movies of some new fashion. If not then hold Christopher's hammer and shut that open ass down
@EvanYoungMusic6 жыл бұрын
This movie was robbed of ALL awards... And Hans Zimmer's score blew my mind.
@yser656 жыл бұрын
Agreed! Zimmer robbed!
@GudieveNing6 жыл бұрын
Evan James Ditto
@invisiblekid996 жыл бұрын
It was, but me personally think it's done to how the judges listened to it. It would have been mainly screener discs, and I bet most have crappy sound systems or even just TV speakers. This sound track is utterly, utterly brilliant, but it's only that when its on a kick ass system. I saw in in IMAX and my ears hurt. Good, just as they needed to be with this film
@Thrashaero6 жыл бұрын
well i mean all Zimmer did was fall asleep on the organs...
@skyhawk7476 жыл бұрын
He didn't even play the organ too, it was the organist of the London Temple Church.
@dougstyles50916 жыл бұрын
Such an original masterpiece. Every aspect of this film is mind blowing.
@mushypork12726 жыл бұрын
Space Odyssey 2001?
@sauceaddict95695 жыл бұрын
Fr
@NetvoTV5 жыл бұрын
But they say a lot of the idea like the wave planet is from Doraemon
@scottpepper70285 жыл бұрын
@@mushypork1272 boring film, interstellar is class.
@Someone-qk5ym4 жыл бұрын
@@mushypork1272 brilliant movie but its very different
@gabihill55165 жыл бұрын
For me, it's the music, it's so amazing, just beyond what I can describe. The movie is also incredible and awesome plot.
@iknowyoureright85645 жыл бұрын
Gabi Hill then check out M83, they will blow your mind, it’s multiple albums of literally this exact music. Check out the album, “hurry up, we’re dreaming” thank me later, literally has changed my life. :-)
@DougCreasy5 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer is a G. All his soundtracks are amazing. Check him out on Spotify. Dunkirk, Dark Knight Triology, Interstellar, Inception, Gladiator, the list goes on and on. It's amazing his songs evoke emotions without any words being spoken. Nolan's films would not be the same without Zimmer.
@markheller1974 жыл бұрын
Gabi Hill yes the music makes the film transcendent
@wonderwoman74434 жыл бұрын
Hans zimmer......movie music. Check his work out....👌👌👌
@Seluecus14 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% and would go even further to say that my favorite score is No Time For Caution and that entire Sequence. Between Dr. Mann's explosive decompression (scared the shit out of me in theater.) Cooper's "No, It's Necessary" line and the score.... that was my all time favorite scene in the entire movie.
@thirdeyefocus62555 жыл бұрын
Imagine being on a new planet alone, thinking that you may be the last woman alive and need to save humanity.
@rajarajanmanoharan6 жыл бұрын
Can't believe the score didn't win an Oscar that year.
@midamultitool13876 жыл бұрын
Rajarajan Manoharan What movie won? Sorry I don't know anything about Oscar.
@waterspray57436 жыл бұрын
The score from the movie Budapest Hotel won the Oscar that year.
@rajarajanmanoharan6 жыл бұрын
Its called the Grand Budapest by Alexandre Desplat.
@semitar66 жыл бұрын
I agree...brilliant score..
@alex_nita6 жыл бұрын
oscars its not about talent and quality. Its about SJW shit and rapists.
@sankarmca76376 жыл бұрын
I ciried when murph said... "Because My Dad Promised me..."
@waterspray57436 жыл бұрын
I also cried when Cooper said, "Because I gave it to her."
@khaledfattouh55926 жыл бұрын
I *ciried* when i saw this comment.
@BostonsF1nest6 жыл бұрын
Would have been better if she wasn’t so old... I just found it extremely creepy that McConnahay and some old lady were doing a scene like that
@yser656 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@JoybuzzerX6 жыл бұрын
If she was younger, he likely wouldn't have left her.
@wayne47976 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't say Dr Mann lost his mind, he was just a coward. He realized his planet was not sustainable so he sent out a thumbs up signal so someone would think the planet was good and so rescue him. His shame and cowardice caused him to try and abandon the team.
@knifesk6 жыл бұрын
I agree with you.. Damon deserved to die real hard on this one haha
@bodomiller42756 жыл бұрын
A traitor to humanity
@robertturnip78506 жыл бұрын
Loneliness and no human interaction can make people do all sorts of crazy things out of desperation. Imagine being on another planet and not having seen another person in years knowing that you might possibly die there alone.
@kingarmish6 жыл бұрын
Wayne your comment is so basic. You should probably read some psychological problems and their effects. Cause Loneliness is really a dangerous thing.
@wayne47976 жыл бұрын
King Armish talk about a basic comment. That ish you just regurgitated was so generic. Of course loneliness is a factor, it can also be a motivator. The script said Dr Mann was the best of us, meaning he was smart and calculating. He didn’t want to die in failure all alone, he’s will to survive kicked in so he kept sending the thumbs up and went into cryo sleep KNOWING eventually someone would show up. He planned it all out years before they even got there. He was more calculated than you give him credit for, if anything it’s basic to just say he went crazy. That would be a shallow ass comment
@sunrisesetsflash6 жыл бұрын
For me this is one the best Movies ever! First time I watched it I were speechless, crying and just thinking about so things! Really NO other movie has touched me so much like "Interstellar" a true masterpiece!
@frankaustin62365 жыл бұрын
I was speechless too Well because I didn't understand
@unkown96715 жыл бұрын
I envy you guys cuz you understand the movie while me a 17 yrs old young man have no idea what happened 😁
@scottpepper70285 жыл бұрын
Did the same to me.pure class of a film
@Palmieres5 жыл бұрын
Go watch Solaris (the original Russian movie from the 70s). It's incredibly complex, beautiful and makes you just sit there and pause for two hours, trying to take it all in.
@HarryNicNicholas5 жыл бұрын
watch "my life as a dog".
@KGisthename6 жыл бұрын
This movie was moving and Mathew gave a stellar performance!
@neolid10516 жыл бұрын
K G or an interstellar performance ;p
@jibicusmaximus48276 жыл бұрын
couldn't understand a word he mumbled.
@Mazer_Duck6 жыл бұрын
As amazing as the script, direction and acting were I can't help but feel Hans Zimmer stole the show. One of the best OST ever.
@andreasoloansihotang1226 жыл бұрын
Neolid you beat me to it heheh
@bassamabulela6 жыл бұрын
LOL ikr!
@The_darkside_of6 жыл бұрын
One of the best movies ever made with an outstanding soundtrack... u walk out of the theatre with an opioid like effect that's been etched into your memory bank for a long time, with the soundtrack playing over and over
@TheSilentJorge6 жыл бұрын
That soundtrack is some magic-ass shiet
@The_darkside_of6 жыл бұрын
@@TheSilentJorge ur on the money there.. it is magic. Takes u into another world... and it hatches in it head.. u keep hearing it over and over... specialy during the scene where they try to attach the station
@achillesian6 жыл бұрын
it felt amazing, such a memorable, maybe the most memorable theater experience of my life
@corbynwilliams66586 жыл бұрын
enzo2enzo2enzo as soon as I finished it, I literally sat in my living room with the soundtrack on just thinking 💀
@olandohart35846 жыл бұрын
@@corbynwilliams6658 LOL!! I did the exact same thing!! I played that song at least 25 times as I sat in meditation. AWESOME!!! Hans Zimmer is AWESOME!
@PaladinMthe13th6 жыл бұрын
Wow, it doesn't seem like it's been four years since Interstellar was released. My wife and I had our first child, my daughter, last year. Watching this video now really had a profound emotional impact on me because it made me remember the whole movie and view it through the perspective of a father. It really makes me reevaluate what McConaughey's character had to go through.
@darthmong71966 жыл бұрын
I get teary with any father/daughter drama. This made my cry hysterically. My daughter is Murph's age.
@kauepereira66 жыл бұрын
Nice story. Thanks for sharing with us =)
@stevecampion48006 жыл бұрын
Yes it's strange but I suppose very natural the way your world view changes when you have children. Watching films now that I have two small kids I can't help but see the film through a fathers eyes. The road was a hard film to watch after we had our son.
@l.e.phillipsАй бұрын
And now it’s been 10.
@reddevils67635 жыл бұрын
The Hans Zimmer music just gives me so much of goosebumps.
@THE16THPHANTOM6 жыл бұрын
2014... seems like the movie came out this year in my mind. really, 2014? not even 2017? one year used to look like 10 years once, now 4 years feels like 6 months.
@motoryzen6 жыл бұрын
Welcome to growing up, having more and different priority changes in life, and realizing that your focuses have changed as well as your goals. It's a ....double edged sword. It sucks, and it can be great at the same time. 1999 seems like almost yesterday for me, but that is half my life ago. The more your learn, master, and make a part of you in life, the more you accomplish, bigger plans..etc..the faster it seems to go by. (sigh)
@luisanaya93276 жыл бұрын
how fucked would it be if life is moving faster and we dont even have the technology to realize it...
@philipchenmba6 жыл бұрын
It means you are getting old, LOL! Time seems to fly faster when people are old, maybe the dimension of time is wrapped around older people so when younger people feel like 4 years, it feels like 1-2 years for older people.
@rendonrjr6 жыл бұрын
Time is accelerating, like were rushing towards something.
@User923766 жыл бұрын
That's exactly what i was thinking..... I guess time really flies
@dr.berryfx85806 жыл бұрын
"Don't go gently into that good night. Rage,rage against the dying of the light." -Dr John Brand I N T E R S T E L L A R
@ben92625 жыл бұрын
thats actually a real quote by dylan thomas
@whosyourdodo87475 жыл бұрын
Nevertheless, a good quote!
@simonbellamy674 жыл бұрын
@@ben9262 not a quote by Dylan Thomas its a proper poem
@harrisonw21864 жыл бұрын
@@simonbellamy67 it's technically both a quite and a poem, originally by dylan thomas, it can be called a quote as it is quoted in the movie by Michael Cain aka Dr Brand
@simonbellamy674 жыл бұрын
@@harrisonw2186 the poem is not quoted by Dr Brand. It's recited by him. The fact.that its not recited fully is because its a film. Dr Brand recites the beginning of a poem. POEM not a QUOTE.
@SpyroCurtis6 жыл бұрын
Interstellar was the first movie in my life that made me at the end of the movie go again straight to the tickets booth and renew my ticket to see it the same night for second time in a row... i was in the IMAX for about 6 hours enjoying the marvelous scenario, story, plot, visuals and the amazing music of Hans Zimmer... trying to making with my mind my own scenarios about what happened and i agree with the "after death" vision. Just a masterpiece! for me is the best movie ever, since we joined 21st century and nowadays.
@joyboytheo6 жыл бұрын
this is it chief
@TheBillproject6 жыл бұрын
You really need to see 2001 if you think this is the best movie ever... you can tell they are big fans of Kubrick from this movie... the whole epic music with space person mortality ending has been done and better by the original, Stanley Kubrick
@fuaddanial20296 жыл бұрын
71% rating at Rotten Tomatoes, 74% at Metacritic, pretty low ratings to be "the best movie ever" if you ask me
@TheCasual1016 жыл бұрын
@@fuaddanial2029 Those ratings and other opinions about the movie are subjective, I don't take movie critics seriously but one thing I could say this movie is one of the best movies I've ever seen. One of my favorite IMO
@fuaddanial20296 жыл бұрын
@@TheCasual101Movie critics aren't subjective. They're made by people who study film theory and have a deeper sense of cinema and its technicalities than your average movie goer. In regards to the movie itself, there's A LOT to pick apart when you actually look at it .
@nay46585 жыл бұрын
I have to admit, the family reunion felt weird. His grandchildren didn't even blink at the sight of a living hero. "Hey, Churchill just arrived in the room, and he happens to be your grandpa !"... who gives a damn? Not even the young children were curious to see the ancestor they learned about at school, and probably the guy who caused them to hear "oh cooper, are you related to this famous...." their whole life. Its as if Yuri Gagarin or Albert Einstein came back to life after finding the cure for cancer while reversing global warming, with the grown up kids going "oh no, i don't know this guy, stay away from me... creep. Yeah, go kiss mama goodbye because you are related, but don't you TOUCH my kids.... i'm watching !".
@rick4electric5 жыл бұрын
Churchill was an asshole, responsible for a world war! He pushed Poland to commit genocide on its German citizens, forcing Germany to attack and defend them! Churchill promised to come and defend Poland, but just sat and watched Poland get creamed! People are so brainwashed, and they think they know history. The winners get to hide their sins and blame the losers, even though it is well known that England was jealous of German manufacturing and decided to trick them into war so England could remain Supreme! Its SO fucked up! A group called "The Focus" took advantage of Churchill's debts and paid him to start a war with Germany! As usual the group was funded by the Rothschild Bank of England! War is their business, even today! They own our "Federal" Reserve which has NOTHING to do with the U.S. Government, because it is a PRIVATE BANK ISSUING PRIVATE MONEY WITHOUT ANY BACKING! Our Constitution allows ONLY gold and silver money issued by the Treasury Department! The FED is illegal!
@theyremykidstoo16425 жыл бұрын
@@rick4electric you CLEARLY missed the point, what a waste of a comment
@nay46585 жыл бұрын
@@rick4electric when i pointed at the moon, you started a political rant on the finger. Good one internet. I'm sure I don't need to quote you the original saying and you already figured your place in it.
@mr.wonderbreadman35975 жыл бұрын
I mean think about it when they learn about it this man (Cooper) who did the impossible was gone for years let alone the shock that hit them a man un-aged for years upon years walked in it would make you feel like you just witnessed a ghost but again you are right it is really weird with how the other’s facial reactions are set as ones who viewed with indifference they have no facial surprise or shock as if it was something normal to them
@jeff57275 жыл бұрын
@@nay4658 exactly bro even the doctors didn't even have much respect on him. hahaha
@moriatyalpha6 жыл бұрын
still think this movie is way better than inception
@vagabond83856 жыл бұрын
Inception is overrated
@iamaronman6 жыл бұрын
yea this was an extremely under-rated movie
@spacemanjupiter6 жыл бұрын
Inception was an hour too long. I was bored of it within the first hour.
@thebatman28376 жыл бұрын
Agreed...Interstellar is a masterpiece cannot say the same about Inception.
@nopederp60276 жыл бұрын
I was expecting a very thoughtful movie and enter stage left: Matthew McConaughey and I had a very hard time taking it seriously. it was also when Jessica C was being shoved down our throats (same goes for Chris P). that movie was pretty easily dismissed.
@TheOtherSteel6 жыл бұрын
Now I have to go watch the movie again.
@scottpepper70285 жыл бұрын
Nothing wrong with that.
@Meloncholymadness6 жыл бұрын
Anne Hathaway isw so beautiful in this film! Also Hans Zimmer's music is excellent as always!
@Smoove_J5 жыл бұрын
I have never understood the Anne Hathaway haters out there. She’s fantastic, never gives a half-hearted performance.
@MaxCE5 жыл бұрын
@@Smoove_J they never hated her for performance. But her real life behaviour.
@wraith01mg5 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer..... also the keyboardist in Buggles.
@HarryNicNicholas5 жыл бұрын
all scientists are beautiful, all people are scientists, all people are beautiful, discuss.
@JT_15 жыл бұрын
@@wraith01mg Wrong!
@concretgod80855 жыл бұрын
The docking scene is the best scene in the whole movie. "it's not possible" "no, it's necessary"!
@cj50214 жыл бұрын
When he left Brand to visit the third planet and essential floated himself into space, what was he trying to do? Was he essentially committing suicide in order for her to be able to have the fuel needed to make it to the third planet and live?
@Jacob_frye4 жыл бұрын
@@cj5021 they were using the black hole to slingshot the endurance to the last planet and the endurance needed to lose weight in order to escape the black holes gravity so cooper and tars detached 2 space shuttles in order to lighten up the endurance he sacrificed himself for the mission
@Jacob_frye4 жыл бұрын
@@cj5021 it wasn't about fuel it was about weight the fuel was long gone when they docked on the endurance and slowed down the ferocious spinning
@johneshuis12156 жыл бұрын
one of the best movies I have seen in my 66 years life
@timwass16 жыл бұрын
Oh come on John. What about the first time you saw 2001 A Space Odessy, in 1970 ???
@johneshuis12156 жыл бұрын
@@timwass1 Interstellar is a lot more coherent than 2001 (fantastic movie). Can you explain the meaning of 2001? I can't. Can I explain the meaning of Interstellar? Yes, I think so. And in depth of space mechanics 2001 tells me absolutely nothing. HAL is funny these days with his dated red eye.That's the difference. Solaris is also a good example, great movie to think about, but also a lack of reality.
@paulking69036 жыл бұрын
@@johneshuis1215 Interstellar was not realistic, I mean look at the ending with the book shelf's. 2001 is a masterpiece and a far more realistic depiction of space than Nolan's film. In terms of a philosophical and existential work of art, 2001is far far superior to Interstellar.
@jayd13426 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% . I tell people it is the best sci fi movie ever made by far and away!
@hello2jello4mellow346 жыл бұрын
I am still more into 2001, but Interstellar is a good film. I i doubt people will watch Interstellar in 20 years and be amazed, but in 50 years people will still watch 2001 in awe.
@mitshumarner58706 жыл бұрын
A truly intelligent movie. A rarity in today's cinema.
@philsurtees6 жыл бұрын
A truly ridiculous movie filled with impossible 'science', idiotic people, and giant plot-holes. Christopher Nolan making such a terrible movie is indeed a rarity.
@si_monster73656 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt Kip Thorne is idiotic?
@johnjohnson15146 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt One impossible science? What plot hole.
@TravelWBrennanMegan6 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt Impossible science, I'm glad you know much about space time, physics, etc. Sorry you couldn't enjoy the movie.
@Lanzik_6 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt clearly you never finished high school
@superhyphy1296 жыл бұрын
wow has it really been four years? a favorite without a doubt.
@maximilianboo5 жыл бұрын
The biggest plot hole in Interstellar was the decision to travel to Miller's planet before going to Dr. Man or Edmunds planets. The main reason outlined by the crew to go to Millers planet first was because it was the closest to their current location after traveling through the worm hole, and that it would take months to travel to the other two planets. During this scene they do a fair job of explaining relativity and the time dilation the crew would experience on Millers planet due to its proximity to the black hole Gargantua. Specifically, one hour on Millers planet would be the equivalent of 7 years on Earth. But knowing this it seems obvious that traveling to Miller's planet first is a bad decision. Doyle said it would take months to reach Dr. Mans planet and even longer to reach Edmunds, and if neither of those two planets are viable they would have to spend even more time to travel back to Millers planet. These planets are outside the huge gravitational pull of Gargantua so they wouldn't experience the same time dilation as on Millers planet. Although they don't specifically say in the movie, lets estimate it would take the crew 4 months to reach Dr. Mans planet and another 2 months to reach Edmunds planet, so in total it would take the crew 1 year round trip to travel to Edmunds planet and back to Millers. Assuming the crew experiences no time dilation during this journey, exactly 1/7th of an hour (around 8 and a half minutes) would have passed on Miller planet. Knowing this it seems completely logical to travel to the other two planets first because it would be the equivalent of spending about 10 minutes on Millers planet. If they truly treated time as a resource they would have chosen to travel to the other two planets first. Another point to this plot hole is when on Millers planet after the tidal wave leaves them stranded, Brand explains that because of the time dilation, Miller would have landed only a couple of hours before they arrived and likely died minutes before they got there. But they should have realized this before they decided to go to Millers planet. I mean they explained relativity and time dilation right before deciding on going to Millers planet, don't you think they would have realized that relative to their time of over a decade since Miller left Earth, she would have only spent a few hours on the planet before they got there? I appreciate how Interstellar addresses concepts like relativity, time dilation, and quantum mechanics but it seems unrealistic that the scientists and engineers wouldn't be able to rationalize that going to Millers planet first is a waste of all their resources including fuel, oxygen, and time; especially given the fact that they addressed the time dilation effect on Millers planet. I love Interstellar and its one of my favorite movies, but this apparent plot hole and logical flaw leaves me scratching my head every time I watch the film.
@muhammadnabil33905 жыл бұрын
First,the only reason why i think they decided to go was to conserve fuel.If they tend to go to Mann's planet or Edmund's planet first & found out that life can't survive over there then going back can be a waste of time & even worse,they might not be able to make it back to Earth.This is why they decided to go to Miller's planet first but still i agree with your point too that even though they knew about the huge time difference on Miller's planet but they still decided to go over there. I have to say that the huge tidal wave in Miller's planet was scary though. Second,why do i feel that the Cooper we saw in the beginning wasn't the original one but instead many Coopers' died & later, one Cooper finally solved the Tesseract through the help of advanced human beings. Third,the Cooper who solved the Tesseract had to go save Brand as in to stop her from populating Edmund's planet with humans(future advanced beings) because if he didn't then the whole cycle will repeat again & Brand will yet again lead to the creation of advanced human beings.
@camerontoy81545 жыл бұрын
maximilianboo all that writing for 2 likes
@robiars14prenk785 жыл бұрын
Yo man. Its pretty sad that people didn't seem to care about your comment.I personaly think that you are right and everything you said was correct.Underrated comment.
@vorceful62955 жыл бұрын
Muhammad Nabil they weren’t going to go back to earth anyway they had to stay in Edmunds planet because it was habitable they had no way to get back to earth as the wormhole collapsed as they went through it but I believe another one opened near Neptune that also led to that solar system (galaxy)
@garybecker72465 жыл бұрын
I thought the exact same thing. I would have gone to the 2 other planets first just because the huge lapse in time they would encounter on millers planet.
@roberthicks16126 жыл бұрын
"he's the man that saved humanity". There is a problem with this. When he learns the name of the ship (not station as it is carrying humanity to the new home), he assumes it was named for him BUT he is told it was named for his daughter. EVERYONE assumes that SHE was the one that saved humanity. So the family would not see him as a savior, only as some stranger they had never seen. Considering his age, they would question if he really was related to them.
@XRinger6 жыл бұрын
I saw it as they both saved humanity. Along with all the other people working on the project. But the daughter was there and he wasn't, so she was given the credit, mostly. In the end, I kinda expected to see him landing his borrowed spacecraft on the planet of One Woman, or New Earth..
@roberthicks16126 жыл бұрын
I agree that the people watching new that it was a team effort, but the point I was making was that the family only new of him as a name, someone that they didn't know anything about other than he had abandoned their savior to go on unknown quest and so when he shows up, none of them have a clue how to relate to him. For their entire life, she has been the one they were taught was the savior of humanity and now a young man, younger than many of them, shows up claiming to be an ancestor, they do not have a single point of conversation to even begin to relate to him. Remember she was not even married until after she had discovered the answer. So her own children grew up with the knowledge that she was THE savior.
@XRinger6 жыл бұрын
Getting all of 'humanity' behind her (one person) for the project might have been the best plan. A rallying point. The only other reason (for ignoring her father) that comes to mind is that everyone in the family had been briefed on their Time Travelling Great GrandFather, and were warned not to make a fuss and overwhelm him. Until he had become mentally acclimated, they were to walk on eggshells.. Brings to mind kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGW8inaCiLCbg5o "Steve Rogers Wakes Up 70 Years Later | Captain America The First Avenger (2011) "
@roberthicks16126 жыл бұрын
Those are both good points too. The story doesn't explain it. I personally would have expected the reactions they showed to have been what would have happened for either reason.
@roberthicks16126 жыл бұрын
It might have been that they didn't believe her. It would have been difficult for her to explain how he had gotten the data to her.
@okcomputer01016 жыл бұрын
I love this movie. Interstellar defines Love as a universal force like gravity, time, and energy. To me, Nolan explains that love is probably the most powerful of all forces in the universe.
@chaqillenikita7486 жыл бұрын
It’s a phenomenally beautiful message AND film, isn’t it? 👍
@lentilneeds6 жыл бұрын
Love is the only thing that stops us going insane in this sad existence.
@maxpawa92826 жыл бұрын
okcomputer0101 are you for real! love doesnt save people.
@VegasDiz6 жыл бұрын
The only TRUE love that exists is a parents to their child
@yser656 жыл бұрын
Yes, Chaqille.
@vlisto37126 жыл бұрын
I still have the multiple timelines theory. In the first timeline, Cooper falls into the black hole and dies, along with everyone on earth. This leaves Brandt to be the last human in existence, and using the eggs on the ship, she restarts humanity on the new planet. Eventually this new humanity evolves into 5th dimensional beings. They construct the tesseract that Cooper falls into.
@agroumoutis6 жыл бұрын
Vlisto lol yeah idk bout that
@brotalk76726 жыл бұрын
WOW what a theory I like it !!
@kaspartambur6 жыл бұрын
That's a cool idea, but one must question then - why isn't the advanced Saved humanity contacted with the other timeline 5th dimensional beings or not mentioned as the true saviors of humanity. Hmmmm
@juliusalfvenstarkenberg1686 жыл бұрын
Since they are 5th dimensional beings they can't interact with lower dimensional beings in a way for us to understand or witness with our eyes. The tessaract were simply their way to contact us and represent the 5th dimesion in a 3 dimensional space that we humans are capable of understanding.
@stevenwan95616 жыл бұрын
I agree in your theory. I also thought of the reason they created the tesseract, it was because Brand loved cooper and loved the people on earth. That's why they built it, to save cooper and the people on earth.
@elusiveeye14245 жыл бұрын
Nothing is worse for a story than the "it was all a dream" ending.
@wordsoftruth_75 жыл бұрын
Was it all just a dream and actually died or was he saved?
@dane25745 жыл бұрын
@@wordsoftruth_7 Cooper didn't die he was lucky enough to survive the whole trip
@gjokajlaura875 жыл бұрын
Nature Boy 93 in the movie they said befor you die you see a bright light and your children .... he saw the light and his now older child murphy... maybe he died or he survived nobody knows
@anton05205 жыл бұрын
@@gjokajlaura87 well, in wikipedia its says that he lived. But that ofc doesnt mean that its true
@RhinoXpress4 жыл бұрын
If he died then how did everyone else see him on the ship when he returned? Also a flight crew personal noticed a space craft was missing at the end of the movie...
@sonicguyver74456 жыл бұрын
I like to take the ending of the movie as it is. In the Tesseract TARS says that it was created by the fifth dimensional beings as a way of Cooper to act on their behalf. This all seems to play to the idea that it is a future humanity doing this because in doing so they insure their own existence. Plus it makes the movie more satisfying to watch with the idea that every problem and tragedy the crew went through was all needed to get Cooper to that point where he is able to send the data back for Murphy to use. And on a side note I have to say the robot designs in that movie may be some of the most clever in decades. TARS and CASE had such simple designs but they proved to be very versatile throughout the movie.
@maxmiller246 жыл бұрын
Sonic Guyver I
@SsoulBlade6 жыл бұрын
". In the Tesseract TARS says that it was created by the fifth dimensional beings as a way of Cooper to act on their behalf. This all seems to play to the idea that it is a future humanity doing this because in doing so they insure their own existence. " This is the part tht makes zero sense. If my future self (or 5D beings) alreadz exists, why bother creating a wormhole? I already exists in the future. No need to do anything.
@rzqy6 жыл бұрын
@@SsoulBlade Maybe it's not from the same future, the future humanity (the 5D beings) that created this Tesseract might not have a bright future, but did find out what to do to help humanity; by changing the past. But excluding "time machines" they somehow managed to structured the black hole. So it's helped their own kind; humanity, but in a different dimension.
@sonicguyver74456 жыл бұрын
@@SsoulBlade It's called "pre-destination paradox." It's time travel concept that events in the future happen because someone the future went back and changed something in the past. The 5D beings exist in the future because they helped Cooper in the past. If he didn't fall into the black hole he never would have been able to send the information he needed to in order for Murphy to crack the gravity issue. They authored their own existence by helping as they did. It's a paradox because it shouldn't be. Humanity got help from the 5D beings. In helping humanity, humanity eventually evolves into the 5D beings and then help humanity so they can become the 5D beings.
@taymanp41075 жыл бұрын
You have no idea what a 5th dimension being is lol thay do not have the same reality, limitations and laws of physics as we do so you cannot use our laws or our challenges for them! Secondly HUMANS are not 5th dimensional being we wont be 500000 years from now smh! People don’t evolve into 5th 6th 7th dimensional beings! So God is just a futuristic human 2000000000000 million of millions years from now huh? Lol
@jamesharvey68336 жыл бұрын
Interstellar was a phenomenal movie with extraordinary acting performances.
@BobBob-rr9df6 жыл бұрын
I would love to have Tarz as my friend lol
@guyincognito73085 жыл бұрын
but not a poker face slick...
@sandrinojohnsun99494 жыл бұрын
He got fried :c
@robertjohnson97564 жыл бұрын
Im a recovering addict and i had i death experience and i remember everything i saw. I did see geometric shapes the only think i can compare it to was a colidiscope then i saw the creation of the universe in reverse until everything went white with waves of red. I woke up 2 days later in the hospital. I cant even describe how i felt but that was my rock bottom and ive been sober for 8 years now
@masonridgewell80634 жыл бұрын
Wow please tell me you are not joking
@robertjohnson97564 жыл бұрын
Not something id joke about you never whos coming close to rock bottom and if my experience can help one person not go through that its worth puting my experience out there
@allenvaughan16 жыл бұрын
At 2:27 to 2:28:30 (two hours, twenty-seven minutes) into the movie, during the "tesseract" scene, and the dialogue Cooper has with TARS, you get an incomplete clue. "They didn't bring us here to change the past." "No...we did." Building the tesseract inside the singularity obviously had been "waiting" for at least 48 years before Cooper's mission even launched (remember the NASA conference room scene, where Doyle is giving the presentation.) Now, pulling things together, just how did Cooper's daughter, at such an in her mid-thirty's, spend so many years with that set of equation on creating the ability to make those tubular space stations. And then, in some coup de gras, have the knowledge, either by herself or collaboration with unrecognized figures outside the movie, a tesseract, in another galaxy, and in that specific black hole, just so her father could send her the message in Morse Code? My theory: it wasn't just love. But love had a lot to do with the motivations for building the Tessaract specifically as it was: Murphy's bedroom, and her bedroom only. What built the tessaract? Or rather, who? Remember Coop's words: "We did". How I think it works out is that: 1. 1st reality is that: Humanity went extinct. There was no "Cooper" going into space. There may have been a "Professor Brand", working on "the equation" of solving gravity, but he, nor any of his counterparts solved the equation before extinction. 2. But before they went extinct, the last humans programmed TARS and his counterparts on two directives: First, to work on the equation until they solved it. And the second directive was for the purposes of reviving the human race, if, as theorized, they learned that one could communicate through gravity into a prior space-time. And to do so, they had to build the tessaract. They also understood the relationship Cooper had with Murphy, and used that relationship to their advantage, in completing their mission. But it was the robots that saved the human race by reviving it, in the first reality. It's not really sexy, or heart warming, and not a "love conquers all" kind of theory. 3. The 2nd reality is, the robots cleaned their tracks, and it took 48 years and several trials to finally get a "Cooper" to go through the wormhole, fall into a black hole and then communicate with his older daughter. (It couldn't be his younger daughter, since, if at age 10 she had received the message--the equation(s), that would have violated much of the movie sequences we watch. But, hey, the tin men had "time on their side". Right? (Thanks, Mick!) They could run the scenario an infinite number of times before they got it right! Nobody goes "back in time". Time can be compressed or dilated. And to keep the movie on solid quantum ground, time didn't have to run backwards. Inside the tessaract, it was "only a matter of time" before Cooper figured out that he could send a message to the past. Time is time, and eternal time at the same time. (Thanks to Kant.) And "all in good time" (Thanks, Bill S.), I suppose! I explained this theory of mine to my 15 and 11 year-old daughters... and they both got it! I'm hoping there are more kids, like them, in their generation, that are open to the limitless possibilities this universe has for them to discover.
@mathiaslovnes26676 жыл бұрын
What I don't understand is how there is a tesseract inside of the black hole. You mention that maybe humans created it, but that doesn't seem possible at all(?). Also, how come Cooper can access that exact moment in time? Just because of love? It's only conisting of chemical reactions in the brain, and therefore should have no effect on physical space. And why is it assumed that cooper can change previous events in the same reality? Doesn't the butterfly effect have an effect on this? Not trying to disprove your theories, just wondering, because this ending is very complicated in my opinion.
@JakeMedina5 жыл бұрын
The reason as to why the tesseract was built was simply because Plan B was a success. *Humanity never went extinct.* Eventually in the very far-away future, humans eventually evolved into the 5-dimensional beings that built the tesseract that was used to save Earth (probably because they were facing their own crisis, on similar terms to the one in the movie). You are correct in saying that Murph aided in creating the tubular space stations from the gravity equation, however it probably took hundreds of thousands (or even millions) of years later to harness the gravity equation in the context of a complete understanding of space-time by humanity, to the point where something such as the tesseract could ever be built. However, one of your questions remains: how did they know to create the tesseract specifically for Cooper, and specifically for him to see his daughter's room? To clear up somethings before this explanation: These events didn't occur any time close to when Murph was developing the space stations, so Murph didn't have any part in building the tesseract. If you go back to what I said at the beginning, the events that occurred throughout this entire movie (the whole Endurance mission) were the key to the entire future of humanity. The mission made Plan B a success and created a new generation of humans on Edmunds' planet. Cooper, Brand, Murph, they're probably the subject of an entire field of history for the future humans, because what they did saved mankind. So, the future humans knew that Cooper specifically was the only person who could transmit the quantum data to Murph, and Murph specifically (being a scientist) was the only person who would most likely interpret the data in a meaningful way. Like you said, love did play a role in the tesseract because it is what drives Cooper to save Murph, and it is also why the tesseract shows Murph's room specifically. Cooper realizes that he can still save Murph without changing the past, and also save all of mankind in the process. So yes, love did conquer all. This movie portrays that love is the fundamental drive for every human being, and the connection between Cooper and his daughter was *the* key to saving mankind.
@JakeMedina5 жыл бұрын
The lines "We did" implies Cooper's understanding that _humanity_ built the tesseract, not literally Cooper and TARS or anyone with a close connection to them. He says "we brought ourselves", meaning that humanity, in the far future, decided to guide Cooper into the tesseract in order to, in Cooper's own words "save the world".
@210Deek5 жыл бұрын
Time isn't time not when talking quantum physics I'm no prof but I now time isn't linear in that realm.
@JakeMedina5 жыл бұрын
@@mathiaslovnes2667 The concept of love in this movie is explained more in detail by Dr. Brand so we can grasp how Cooper can have this connection with Murph in the tesseract. In the scene where Brand is trying to convince Cooper to go to Edmunds' planet, we receive more insight into Brand's thinking. Brand has realized that the emotion of love is _so_ strong that she has actually traveled _billions_ of miles to see someone who, in her own words "is probably dead". Cooper doesn't realize it until he is in the tesseract, but Dr. Brand is correct when she says that love is observable, powerful, an artifact of a higher dimension, and *that it transcends time and space* . As to your second question, Cooper isn't actually _changing_ previous events. This movie follows what is known as the Novikov self-consistency principle, which in the context of Interstellar means that *the timeline of events has never changed* . We know by the end of the movie that time is represented as a physical dimension, and we can actually *watch* Cooper move through time as if every single moment is occurring all at once. Basically, you are trying think about time as based on the present, not as a continuum. Like TARS says, "they didn't bring us here to change the past". *Cooper has always gone back and saved future humanity, and future humanity will always save its past self (through Cooper).* It's just a different way of looking at time, since in the world Nolan portrays there is no beginning or end, there is just always and everything.
@tomhahnl19276 жыл бұрын
Great movie from a great director. I love Interstellar!
@omnikingjosh50146 жыл бұрын
*Everything about this movie was phenomenal from the script down to the instrumentals*
@aerofpv21095 жыл бұрын
The Cooper scene when he cries and fills his eyes with tears watching videograms of his daughter talking to him should have won an Oscar for "best emotion".
@Gui64206 жыл бұрын
My Theory: They had plan A and plan B. The movie in my perception have 2 time lines. One where plan B worked and plan A failed. Dr Brand made it to the planned. Established a new colony for (new) humans survival. Everyone on earth died and that is it. The second time-line is only possible because in a very far away future…thousands or maybe a few millions of years, the (new) and evolved humans found a way to interfere/communicate with the past through gravity (gravity can bend space and time) and created the worm-hole to save people on earth. That is where the new time-line started…a new past where plan A worked and everyone on earth were saved. But only because of plan B.
@worstformm6 жыл бұрын
i felt the same.plan B made the plan A possible.but i don't see that expalination anywhere which made me to doubt myself :P
@donniebuster52006 жыл бұрын
Guilherme Garcia if they evolved to create the wormhole how did brand get there in the first place?
@TreeMan136 жыл бұрын
donnie buster that’s a paradox for you
@stevewolf12056 жыл бұрын
I like this theory 😎👍
@Gui64206 жыл бұрын
U got me there...good question. :p
@hokutobill6 жыл бұрын
I never really thought about the ending being more than it was. However, you bring up some interesting points. I did think it was strange that his family would not be more excited to see this Man who has lived over 100 years and yes was responsible for saving earthlings. Anyway, I love the father daughter relationship and I can watch this over and over again. Thanks to the Nolans for making a great film and let's hope we are not forced to find a new planet because things are not looking good at the moment.
@kaltrex94656 жыл бұрын
The most powerful film I've seen. I understood everything Nolan put forth and ...dead people don't dream... which is interesting. I think that the ending is meant to be true and grounding past the time travel stuff which is always confusing. It was obvious that they know about him and honor him, that's why they have his house as a museum. I'm not a black level astro physicist/quantum engineer, but I think they tried to explain things in a simple way to the best of their knowledge. It's so interesting, I'l remember this. It made me humble to the point of remembering how fragile people are and how some things are so unimportant. I'm amazed...
@sandpapersnail96156 жыл бұрын
This video puts forth the alternative idea that is he is dying (not yet dead) as he is drifting out into space and that the weeks/months of him being quarantined, reintroduced to his daughter and society are just fleeting moments of wish fulfillment before his heart stops beating. Dark ending.
@kaltrex94656 жыл бұрын
Sandpaper Snail yup!
@cph20046 жыл бұрын
What a creative, emotional work of visual art. Beautiful. When movies make you think that's when you know it's a great movie.
@karvalio4 жыл бұрын
indeed
@phillipblount55416 жыл бұрын
That music..... :)
@blinkguy4ever6 жыл бұрын
I get the chills everytime
@hanifmacca6 жыл бұрын
yep, goosebumps every time.
@pope49306 жыл бұрын
Nolan's film scores are always amazing But this film's score is just...
@Papa_WooWoo6 жыл бұрын
Some of the best music in a movie in a long time. Especially if you have a really good surround sound system.
@sandhu79096 жыл бұрын
Movie was...IS awesome as always as anything by The Nolan. BUT Let us all appreciate the EPIC background score by The legendary Hans Zimmer! It does make you feel like you are traveling at the speed of light through space and time...something like that...something unexplainable.
@chronic2001n6 жыл бұрын
In terms of the family scene when Cooper sees his daughter on her deathbed, they might have not even known who he was, and even if they did, they know the significance of the meeting and do not want to interfere. And he knows they might not know who he is and he understands that she will be dying soon and just wants to speak with her one last time before she goes, and so wastes no time in doing so. Remember, she spent most of her years with the family in the room than she did with him. And the family has never seen him before, so he understands that it is more important for her to spend the last minutes/hours with them more than himself. When she tells him (reminds him) about Brand he knows he cannot waste any time getting the f out of there to go find her because he has nothing left but her. He knows no one else. Brand is his last hope, and very much likely, humanity's.
@RazorwireReviews6 жыл бұрын
It's a good point, and I still take the ending of the film at face value, but I also think they would definitely know who he was. Murph would absolutely have told all of her family all about Cooper, what he did, how he saved them, and they would have seen pictures too. But still, like you say, they understand it's not about them.
@brotalk76726 жыл бұрын
interesting observation I just think it was a directors creative choice possibly just to same time nothing more .
@joaorivera7066 жыл бұрын
Murph tried to explain how she got the gravitational problem solved but nobody believed her ghost was actually her father. To people of Earth, Murph was their savior thanks to her equation and Cooper was a hero as much as the other astronauts who traveled with him. Also it can be certainly her family knows about Cooper, but he's still an stranger to their eyes and otherwise. Keep in mind that it is not a welcome party but a last farewell, and the essence of the scene is the meeting between father and his daughter
@TheRogerronaldo6 жыл бұрын
This is hands down still and always will be my favorite movie. So deep. The music too fucks you up deeply. I still cry watching it.
@jadvenne85495 жыл бұрын
I just think that when you get that feeling of "dont do this" is actually you in the future
@CarlJung6666 жыл бұрын
In ancient traditions, Cooper lander in the Akashic Records, the universal library, or Carl Jung’s Collective Unconscious. In simple language, his consciousness transcended beyond space and time and beyond the physical universe. Interstellar is a movie about Transcendence of Being.
@Glopezane6 жыл бұрын
The soundtrack is beyond magnificent. Has anyone ever put on noise-canceling headphones and listened to the soundtrack while driving late at night? The feeling is incredible.
@salladinthegreat5 жыл бұрын
I do it with my noise-cancelling Bose every time I take the plane ^^ As you said, incredible feeling.
@ashwinsanthosh91545 жыл бұрын
You ain't supposed to wear a noise cancelling headphone while driving AT NIGHT.
@jaimev.13875 жыл бұрын
Are you trying to crash?? I dont understand how people can drive around with headphones. Sounds dangerous af
@patricketuk55885 жыл бұрын
Makes me want to go 120mph
@SFBL15 жыл бұрын
IDK where you live, but wearing headphones on both ears while driving is hella illegal in my state.
@alexostriak64585 жыл бұрын
*“She’s settling in for the long nap…”* damn that scene got me
@RetroFrito6 жыл бұрын
I also always took it at face value. The wormhole and teseract were placed there out of necessity by future humans who had mastered bending time and space. All the scenes after his time in the black hole really happened, and the only thing left unknown is whether or not he reached Amelia in time. That's how I'll probably always see it unless a sequel or creator says otherwise.
@johnjohnson15146 жыл бұрын
Frito yeah I agree their really isnt a bigger meaning behind it. It was all explained in the movie
@EthanBeats6 жыл бұрын
who is amelia?
@johnjohnson15146 жыл бұрын
Ethan Official amelia brand or dr brand
@mhamma65606 жыл бұрын
Remember they key line in the movie is that only gravity can transcend time, the black hole is a wholly unknown as gravity is so strong, nothing escapes. The black hole was actually just a gravitational anomaly placed there by future people. They're not there because only gravity can "go back in time". I believe they said he was found floating "Where the wormhole HAD formed". If such is the case and the hole is closed, where the hell is he going since he can't go reach brand w/ out the wormhole?
@Studio27706 жыл бұрын
Nolan did say otherwise by not confirming the face value stance. If it was 100% face value, then Mann would've never talked about what you see before you die.
@sancho78636 жыл бұрын
The scene where cooper reunites with his daughter always bothered me, but makes more sense if he had died. Cooper was always the ghost that haunted his daughter and then he haunts her one last time on her deathbed. I can dig it.
@utbelegs6 жыл бұрын
He didn't die ,though ..he was in a fifth dimension(time tesseract)..which, for him, time was so altered that he was able to find Murph in the time dimension,give her the codes and still had on-board oxygen(barely) enough for the rangers to pick him up in orbit, off Jupiter...amazing theories.
@swimmer09846 жыл бұрын
Sancho not necessarily bud, the movie explores the theory of space time as it pertains to gravitational force quite awesomely,
@udmbfckx29166 жыл бұрын
The Family looked at Cooper when he went in to see his elderly daughter. Not only that, his daughter actually is the one that travels to see him, even though she is dying, and her whole Family followed her there since she was in cryo-sleep for 2 years and she probably was waiting to see her Dad before she died. She was prolonging her Life so that her Dad could fulfill his promise of returning to her.
@yser656 жыл бұрын
No... they sort of ignore him which is weird.
@udmbfckx29166 жыл бұрын
Yes, but they do look at him at first when he enters the room
@zedatomic83426 жыл бұрын
No - you missed the point - For everyone on Earth Murphy is the person they think saved the planet - Some astronaut that they picked up who happens to be her dad does not create much impact - they don't understand what he did. The station was called Cooper station after Murphy!
@yser656 жыл бұрын
Good try, Zed. But why clear the room for 'some astronaut?' That doesn't fit. So... for some astronaut who was Murph's Dad? If they knew this, a totally different reception is required, and if they didn't he has no place at her deathbed - without some sense of curiosity on the part of Murph's family. I love the film, but the scene in question is either just disturbingly sloppy story-telling, or it isn't supposed to be taking place in a shared reality.
@johnm.32796 жыл бұрын
The family was likely under the impression that Cooper abandoned his family. Their reaction to him is more like forced tolerance only because Murphy wanted to see him. No one even smiles when he entered the room. They all just said nothing and just walked out. They had no idea of the role he played. Murphy even alludes to this; kzbin.info/www/bejne/e3TNiqaNgcysaas
@journey95far495 жыл бұрын
One of the best movies I have ever seen, Nolan is a genius
@bigbaggoyard6 жыл бұрын
Here's a small explanation, in real-world time is often considered as the fourth dimension. As cooper falls into the black hole, he gets transported inside the tesseract which is essentially a 3 dimensional object used to represent the fourth dimension (like a square is the 2nd dimensional equivalent of a third dimensional object aka cube). In the tesseract, time which is the fourth dimension is represneted in 3 dimension and just like in real life you can go back and foreward in any 3 axis, in the teserract cooper is able to go back and forwerad in time by just moving in any of the 3 axis. This is how he communicates with his daughter. This movie imo portrays physics pretty accurately up until cooper falls into the black hole because irl he would be cooked alive by the accretion disk and the blackhole's intense gravitational force would crush him or elongate him. Also since no one actaully knows what happens when you are inside a blackhole, its fair for Nolan to be creative.
@philsurtees6 жыл бұрын
This movie is NOT mostly scientifically accurate AT ALL. It's one of the worst science fiction movies in history from that point of view. It is FULL of impossible 'science' and has gaping plot holes. An absolutely terrible film.
@allencs85776 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt dammn, stop hating. It’s just a movie. Lol
@bigbaggoyard6 жыл бұрын
All the science shown in this film is based on real-life proven scientific theories (mainly General Relativity), it does an excellent job portraying the effect of mass on time, it shows the warping of space which is entirely possible. It's only when Cooper falls into the black hole where it's purely theoretical because no one actually knows what would happen if you survived the fall into a black hole. This is why Nolan and the physic's prof he hired had to come up with a plausible idea. And if time really is orthogonal to our three-dimensional space, then what was shown in the movie is entirely possible, maybe not now but in the future. Also, this is a science fiction movie not a fact, cant really get mad at the movie for thinking outside the box.
@mrnicewtf83016 жыл бұрын
Gnorts Mr Alien thank you sir for the clarification on that part it just wants to make you question it more an more but now I see the clarity
@Reub36 жыл бұрын
Not to mention the use of the other dimensions (beyond the 4th dimension) that science often refers to.
@nickedname70485 жыл бұрын
Pure joy and poetry, a total symphony of emotions, every single second of this movie. A movie to feel rather than watch, just "to be in there".
@BabyLouie226 жыл бұрын
When I watched this masterpiece of a film, I felt the love that Cooper holds deeply for his daughter, so it made it very difficult for me to watch him leave her to go save humanity. It broke my heart seeing every scene where he would try to contact her but she would never watch nor reply back. I knew she was angry with him but his love for her never faltered. This movie pulled at my heart and imagination, and makes my love for my son, stronger and deeper than time and space. Peace and love to whomever reads this. ✌❤
@michaelbaker79385 жыл бұрын
And then to find out that plan A was not even a possibility, cause now hes up there and knows he won't see her again. That part hurt me bad. I would of lost it right then if it was me up there knowing I was lied to just to get me to go.
@billholt21985 жыл бұрын
beautifully stated, man!
@tmatrix15 жыл бұрын
The first time I saw the movie while it was released I always believed Cooper died and I strongly believe that's what Nolan also thinks. In a Nolan film no character or dialouge is by chance. All are connected to the story. Matt Damon tells that you see your children...and that you strive to stay alive a little longer for them..." is all connected with the ending. Not to mention the bright white light, his relatives paying no attention to him and more importantly it's a black-hole he fell into. Any science guy will tell you that in a black hole you meet your death and there's no escaping it. So essentially the black hole is a higher dimension of (space-time), which we as humans cannot experience since we are prisoners to this dimension. But we do get its view through Cooper's POV or consciousness. He is perceiving the last moments of his life like a 4-D being, since he is in this higher dimension (time being stretched out due to time relativity at the black hole slowing down time for him). The last parts are him seeing or dreaming near death.
@kendragon20125 жыл бұрын
I love the idea that Cooper has actually passed on and its more spiritual a scenario that leads him to his daughter on her death-bed. Its such a well known, common, phenomenon of people on their death beds, shortly before their final breaths, looking at seemingly empty corners of the room and having conversations or smiling/gesturing to an apparently invisible loved one. The notion that this is the narrative Nolan is going for gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling and goes a long way towards removing the cringe factor of the conveniently happy ending it appears to be.
@johnyapple84475 жыл бұрын
Interstellar is my favorite movie because the science fiction, the theoretical science, the acting, Hans Zimmer’s music, and the absolutely stunning CGI were all of such high quality. The movie was not flawless, but it was also not “spoon-fed” to the audience. I cannot imagine how one could illustrate the 5th dimension any better. Thank you so much to those responsible for making this movie!!
@gerrardtorresbabel6 жыл бұрын
Probably my fav movie of all time, the music alone gives me goosebumps.
@BrooklynBeTheBoro5 жыл бұрын
"Where We're Going" gets me EVERY TIME. Hans Zimmer's score is a masterpiece, and works seamlessly to punctuate every scene. And that ending is so powerful and emotional.
@InNoTime33776 жыл бұрын
One of the greatest movies ive ever seen, it really makes you think outside the box, but also this movie is only for the open minded/adventurous, not for the faint of heart.
@paulhatake6 жыл бұрын
Well I watched it many times because this is a very good movie from one of the best movie director I ever know. I also search it on the internet and other source about the theory in this movie especially about the beings theory (because it confused me a a lot at the firts time) and I think I got the ending means (again it's my opinion). There are theory that one day we will evolved into higher beings to 4 even 5 dimentional being , because right now we live as 3rd dimentional beings. 3 dimentional beings (from the movie) only know that time is relatives(michael cain script) you can fast and slow time but you can't change back time, we stuck in time. 4 dimensional beings (from what i read) they can see ahead of time, 5 dimensional beings they can even turn back the time. They want to help people on earth but because they can't communicate because every being can't understand each other language (again from the theory i read). Cooper don't die, he entered tesseract which is created by the 5th dimentional beings. And because they can't communicate with 3 dimensional beings, they use time as a media to communicate that cooper also understand. Since they (5 beings) cannot locate a point of reference in time (in my opinion maybe because for them time is not a confusing thing like us, they can control time. And when you can control time, every moment is not special right because you can just go back again and again), they let cooper to do it. Why? Because the connection and loves to his daughter (the conversation with brand about love that love is something you can't calculate or something like that), he knows exactly the right moment to communicate with murphy (before he gave the code he's flying searching for a right moment). And before the tesseract vanish cooper said that it was us, human from millennials away that create that thing when human already have the access to all universe and untold amounts of energy. And the part when murphy become very old i think because cooper stay near the gargantua to much. The first planet took 23 years and the sling scene took 50+ years. And I think the reason because the other member react so strange (even maybe didnt care) to Cooper because they only believe that only murphy that save humanity right, like she said. Btw the sun in the space ship is also real theory, i saw it in Nat Geo Again it's my opinion and for me this movie is so awesome and mind blowing
@daniartashbekov28596 жыл бұрын
I dont think this movie was life and death. From my perspective, the movie was intended to visualize how Einstein general and special relativity would impact us, the humans, if we ever traveled fast enough or encountered a black hole. First, we see how the crew travels through a worm whole (a concept that came out of Einstein's theories) and how it allowed to cover vast distances in a manner of minutes. Second, we see the impact of a gravity on time (the crew lands on the water planet and gets stuck there for few hours ... and a decade goes by on the earth, also the general relativity concept). And in the final scene, we see visualization of the spacetime itself from a third party's view (essentially traveling through the black hole allowed Cooper to enter a higher dimension). All that ever existed or can exist was laid out in front of Cooper and he could travel back and worth in spacetime and found his daughter in her bedroom. Nolan then shows these complicated scientific concepts through a human beings eyes and how it all caused so much pain, sadness and despair because the space is so huge and we are hopelessly small.
@Artaxerxes.5 жыл бұрын
In the end maths and physics reign supreme
@LEGENDARYPISO5 жыл бұрын
Yes ...i have too my own calvulation in space time
@ChairmanMeow15 жыл бұрын
This movie seriously broke me for 48 hours or so. I've never had a film do that to me.
@JanT6 жыл бұрын
Just watched the movie and really loved it. So many jaw dropping moments. Really my kinda movie.
@philsurtees6 жыл бұрын
So you're into completely ridiculous fantasy films that are full of plot-holes and impossible 'science' then?
@marcfortig89416 жыл бұрын
I hate those people so much, just gonna block you Yurek. Get a life.
@mrgr33n166 жыл бұрын
Marc Förtig Marc Förtig Yurik is right. Have you really decided to believe science from a movie? Time is uniform. If two people start a stopwatch, one stays on earth and the other travels beyond, both their stopwatches will show the same time when the traveler returns. Please don’t be so gullible that your belief is based on a Sci-Fi movie it makes you look incredibly stupid.
@salabhsg6 жыл бұрын
Mr. Green actually time dialation is really. Even the clocks on a satellite are affected by very small time dialations and therefore correction mechanisms are used to avoid transmission errors.
@N54-i7c6 жыл бұрын
Mr. Green and you just made yourself look pretty stupid with that comment right there lol
@MEV16 жыл бұрын
Basically, Nolan didnt want to put an explanation in the movie cos people's opinion are different. He made us imagine our own explanation which is not bad but it doesnt clear things up properly.
@seaneredia51996 жыл бұрын
Supremacy he took the ending of the inception to a whole nother level! Except people didnt think the ending was ambigious at all xD
@philsurtees6 жыл бұрын
No. He didn't put an explanation in the movie because, after a couple of hours of ridiculous fantasy, impossible 'science', and multiple absurd plot-holes, he had painted himself so badly into a corner that there was no way to resolve the story with a rational explanation. An absolutely terrible film...
@youngfyah6 жыл бұрын
Yurek Hunt I agree. I couldn't enjoy the movie because of plot holes. They got exact corridents to NASA and said gravity gave them the answer. Makes no sense to me.
@philsurtees6 жыл бұрын
+youngfyah - The whole thing is completely ridiculous. But hey, you can see from the comments above that there are plenty of ignorant morons out there who are too stupid to comprehend the numerous problems with it. Willie Wei and MajesticHD are uneducated imbeciles, therefore I must be smoking weed and having sex with my mother! That shows you the kind of mind that thinks Interstellar is a good movie...
@francisr69706 жыл бұрын
Youngfyah.. When they said gravity gave them the answer what Cooper and his daughter mean is tat, they learnt the coordinates from the book shelf through Morse code..
@stevenleal39916 жыл бұрын
It was a very emotional movie seeing that I love my daughter. It got me when he finally came back to see his daughter 1 last time.
@real_Leo_Chang5 жыл бұрын
One of the most underrated Nolan flicks.. IMO one of the best movies of ALL time
@brianwilliams40336 жыл бұрын
Bravo... as a big fan of Interstellar, I never considered your new interpretation of the coda. It could actually fit! Great job.
@RazorwireReviews6 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@RazorwireReviews6 жыл бұрын
I bet you love Back to the Future.
@francisr69706 жыл бұрын
Damn Haters are everywhere... 😂😂😂
@moondawg36936 жыл бұрын
Not as much as he loves himself.
@ZBGregory4 жыл бұрын
Arguably, for me, one of the last films to blow my mind and give me so much appreciation and inspiration for theory and philosophy. I do like to think that technology created 1,000 years in the future would look incomprehensible to us. This film gives a very good interpretation of that technology in the tesseract. The first 2 or 3 times watching this movie, I remember not completely understanding what was happening at that moment and that seems very plausible if it were to happen irl. The reasoning for how and why it was created is still the biggest mystery in this story.
@kevinmikegrit6 жыл бұрын
TARS acquired quantum knowledge. Cooper leaves with TARSto the planet where Brands is. So they can creat a far more advance colony there which can transcend to a point of the 4th dimension, time. One thing to be noted is that time did not change it was happening all the time. The worm hole appears 50 years before, the interruption by the books falling happen, and in the tesseract there you can see all moments of that room occurring at the same time.
@paulhatake6 жыл бұрын
Kevin Michael wow nice. Love your ending version about cooper and brand will make advance colony! Just a question, if that so then there's a possibility that cooper in 5 dimensions create that tesseract to cooper in 3rd dimension?? So there's another loop of time?
@kevinmikegrit6 жыл бұрын
Paul Titus, it doesn't have to be Cooper who creates the Tesseract. It will not be him because it will eventually take a huge amount of resources and effort. So maybe the colony which they create can make the tesseract after a long time in the future and master the 4th dimension.
@kevinmikegrit6 жыл бұрын
EricPlayZ, pretty much correct and also remember that they have a lot of fertilised embryos and a good plan to miltiply the colony to sustainable numbers in a relatively short time.
@keithjackson73046 жыл бұрын
I loved it. It’s literally one of my top five of all time. I never even thought about the Cooper station and him meeting his daughter at an old age to be the death experience. No matter what it’s insanely awesome
@AndreWhitbourn6 жыл бұрын
Great interpretation. I like the idea that the end from when he 'falls' into the tesseract is the beginning of his death. I can imagine Nolan intellectualising a conclusion such as this. Cooper's consciousness/soul could be seen as leaving his body, in a metaphysical sense, and connecting in a quantum entanglement fashion with the time and space of his daughter's room. giving him/his ghost, the chance to interact with her in much the same way as people imagine ghosts or poltergeists do. This would in theory be able to happen instantaneously (represented in a conceptual sense by the tesseract) and all of the visions he has are thus pre-death consciousness as it leaves his body. I love the idea that his mortal life is ending when the film cuts to white. And I think that the theme that Love transcends all time and space still holds. There is an area of belief that the soul and consciousness is at one with the universe and travels from the body at death on a wave of Neutrinos. But Nolan doesn't directly reference this.
@x-tracbeats39286 жыл бұрын
this was the GREATEST movie ever made in my opinion.
@andrefranklin23116 жыл бұрын
X-Trac Beats I agree.
@freak60426 жыл бұрын
Joe Dirt is the best movie ever made. Joe Dirt 2 is the worst movie ever made
@GuyI90006 жыл бұрын
True.... but watch fosters contact.....
@RicZalewski6 жыл бұрын
@Legacy like independence day
@sAMMYsILVER.6 жыл бұрын
Andre Franklin so you haven’t watched watched emoji movie
@jpeike13146 жыл бұрын
Interstellar is so amazing I love this movie
@abesmissioncontrol20135 жыл бұрын
I like the idea of the epilogue being a "death dream." Nolan is very good at subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) metaphor. He doesn't put things in his movies just because they're cool. I come from a musical background - I was trained as a violinist, and studied some music history. The score's prominent use of the organ throughout the film heightens a sense of solemnity and the limits of mortality. There has been a lot of praise given to Hans Zimmer for his innovative score, but I like to think there was something more there than just innovation. Tie that in with the visual metaphors, and the epilogue as a dream makes the most sense to me.
@wailbezzaz79665 жыл бұрын
I left 5 years of my life i just watched it, u can guess that i cried alot
@earlholler78725 жыл бұрын
" This is a world where nothing is solved. Someone once told me time is a flat circle. Everything we've done or will do, we're gonna do over and over again." " It's like in this universe, we process time linearly forward. But outside of our spacetime, from what would be a fourth-dimensional perspective, time wouldn't exist and from that vantage, could we attain it? We'd see our spacetime would look flattened like a single sculpture with matter in a superposition of every place it ever occupied." -- Rust Cohle
@Swish13x206 жыл бұрын
You deserve way more subscribers my guy
@RazorwireReviews6 жыл бұрын
Thanks, though this channel is comprised of many other talented editors and presenters too! :)
@americanenigma_51085 жыл бұрын
The music made it so emotional I cried with its subtle beauty and felt panic attack near end starting feeling like I was losing someone close to me ! That’s how lost I got in the movie journey
@elreydelvideo6 жыл бұрын
*Good video man, this is the reason I off my brain when I go to the movies I just enjoy 2 hours of calm, forget about my problems and let myself get in the world of the movies*
@exelmans88556 жыл бұрын
Aaron Mijail Herrera Castro yes but now it's very rare to do that because of the low quality of the movies. Interstellar was something else.
@Tracor3k996 жыл бұрын
That is exactly how movies should be taken! People getting in to debates about big budget hollywierd films is a bit... Thick
@thedude56006 жыл бұрын
This film blew my mind when I first ever saw it, amazing story telling, and CGI!
@Lance-Stroll5 жыл бұрын
"You told them I liked farming?" That line is cute, sweet, funny, & sad. I love it
@masonridgewell80634 жыл бұрын
That was incredible. Such a legendary first sentence of him after 'seeing' his daughter for the first time in decades.
@ck34805 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer’s music composition is so emotional. It fits so well with the film. Watching this movie after becoming a father had me all in the feels.
@seecha89705 жыл бұрын
I thought this was supposed to be an "Ending Explained" video. Not a "Here's MY Theory" video.
@MikeMessiah5 жыл бұрын
same here. I was wtf is he yapping about.. There are tens of alternative theories on reddit and this guy gives his two theories and this has 2 million fcking views?
@wordsoftruth_75 жыл бұрын
Same...😖🙄 all i wanted to know is if the ending was all just a dream and actually he died in space or if he was safed...
@ebscoHOSTpub4 жыл бұрын
glad i saw this comment before I watched it
@Versat1l4 жыл бұрын
This is not an explanation, the guy simply reads loud the movie. What a waste of time.
@2serveand2protect6 жыл бұрын
If you don't like the "ending" or the Maths behind "Interstellar" just watch yourselves : "KIP THORNE - THE SCIENCE BEHIND INTERSTELLAR" (or "THE SCIENCE OF..." etc., etc. - available here on YT both in a documentary form as a "LECTURE" directly from Kip Thorne) and everything will be explained. You really don't expect people to sit for 50 or a 100 years in a cinema-room, I hope. Anyway! - it's a bit dramatised - SO FREAKIN' WHAT?? - it's STILL one of the greatest Sci-Fi movies I've ever seen, and (not coincidentally) it "came along" with the discovery (or rather discoverIES, since there were multiple) of gravitational waves - "one of the discoveries of our century" - let's hope not the last one! One of the last (let's say) "implications"of Einstein's theories has been PROVEN - GOOD RIDDANCE! - let's move on! THIS IS A MOVIE, dammit - it's not the LIGO observatory! You don't like the ending - too bad for you! I thought the journey was far more important and... - I cannot stress this enough! - the "SCENES & SCENERY" that show Space, the Journey around Saturn, the "wormhole-jump", the "black hole" - not to mention - the AWESOME scene with the sheer, enormous VASTNESS of Space and the "tiny, tiny, little light" that was supposed to be their "yacht" travelling through it, that almost gave me claustrophobia, were probably the best I've ever seen in the "genre", once more proving "the journey is more important than the ending" - in fact! - ANY MOVIE-ending. Regards.
@Nautilus19726 жыл бұрын
The science was wrong everywhere. McConaughey is having a conversation with Hathaway's character as they're leaving Earth's gravity like they're riding in a car. Ridiculous.
@2serveand2protect6 жыл бұрын
Nautilus1972 Well if it was so "RIDICULOUS" then next time YOU make a movie, Sheldon, and let's see what YOU 'll be able to come up with, to show on the "big screen", without people falling asleep in the first 5 minutes. Until then - I really don't care. I found it great. It's a MOVIE, dammit, not a Physics-classroom.
@swimmer09846 жыл бұрын
2serveand2protect Great take on the movie! It is has become one of my absolute favorites of all time (After several watches). I also took time to understand our planet even more and listen to reknowned Astro Physicist Kip Thorne. Only problems with your argument are the following two things.....When the dummies of our planet don’t remotely understand something they decide to immediately take a stand without learning, and......there seems to be no imagination nor interest in what is out there beyond us humans. Those who didn’t like this movie due to the trivial insignificant plot points are likely the same people that lined up to watch the movies Warcraft and Sharknado. Things based in science and math are far too heavy for most.
@2serveand2protect6 жыл бұрын
@@swimmer0984 OOh, you are PERFECTLY RIGHT! Though - I do not know whether critics come out from people, who "NEVER STUDIED Physics". Sometimes I have the impression that's quite the opposite. I mean - PEOPLE WHO GO SEE "INTERSTELLAR" should already have a (at least very basic) UNDERSTANDING of Eistein/Minkowski/Wheeler, etc. These "theories" (PROVEN FACTS TODAY) are knowledge from a HUNDRED YEARS AGO, afterall! For me people often cticize movies as this one, because either they want to "show off" their knowledge (or SUPPOSED knowledge) - OR - they simply cannot understand that MAKING BOOKS ON A SUBJECT (especially so difficult subjects as einsteinian relativity) and making a MOVIE out of it are - to make it short - TWO VERY DIFFERENT THINGS! :) ANYWAY! - as YOU wrote I LOVED IT, TOO! :) :) Something tells me I'll NEVER STOP LOVING THAT MOVIE!! Have a GREAT DAY, my friend! :)
@Alvan816 жыл бұрын
@@Nautilus1972 Do you know how LONG a movie would be to show 8 minutes of them doing hi-g grunting?
@ashfauzzamanaronno66066 жыл бұрын
At first i thought nahh Love cant do that, its not scientific but then i realized that cooper not only could communicate with murph who he loves the most but also he did that handshake with brand going back in time who i think we all agree on this loved brand so he got to meet the two persons that he love beyond time and space, i think its love
@Young_Dab5 жыл бұрын
People think the concept of love is stupid in this movie but we still those close to us who have died! Where's the scientific explanation in that !?
@captaingordon4 жыл бұрын
The music score also made this film phenomenal. Brilliant compliments to each other.
@marcducati6 жыл бұрын
Loved this movie. The music was incredible.
@NothingMaster6 жыл бұрын
Dang, I should really re-educate myself in the ways of the Morse code. It seems even in a most advanced 5-D environment, communication-even that propelled by love-ultimately boils down to knowing the Morse code!
@niveditadey87836 жыл бұрын
NothingMaster 😂😂😂
@bubbaho-tep34686 жыл бұрын
I love that the movie has an ending that is open to your own interpretation. So whichever way you want to believe is right. I love this movie
@docsavage86406 жыл бұрын
I love movies that are good. Interstellar stopped being good as soon as it turned into hippy pseudoscience and a man survives falling into a black hole.
@morrisking93774 жыл бұрын
A beautiful movie mixing Science fiction, with you could say the paranormal, and just plain love! A beautiful concept! An outstanding score! And the movie I never get tired of viewing!!!