During the water planet scene, you hear a ticking sound every 1.4 seconds. This signified the passing of a day on Earth. One hour = 3600 seconds. Seven years = 2556 days (2257 if you include two leap years). 3600/2556 = 1.4. Astrophysicist Kip Thorne was a consultant for the film and provided guidance to make Gargantua look realistic. Bear in mind this was before we got an actual image of a black hole, and even then the representation was spot on.
Do you think Nolan wrote in the script: (Wave nearly at ship) (Doyle stares at wave instead of getting into ship) (Wave splashes water on ship) (Doyle continues to stare at wave instead of getting on ship) (Wave hits Doyle) (Doyle still doesn't get on ship)
He currently weighs something like 270-300 lbs 135 kg and is exhausted. He stood aside to let Brand make it safely! Brand is the entire mission! Brand can restart humanity with embryos (or her body) He may even share Mann's foreknowledge. (iykuk)
@@tristenmoles7933 I froze up just seeing it in IMAX, friend.. 😂 It almost scaled perfectly like you were looking up at the same angle as standing there.
When I say it was the loudest thing I've ever heard in a theater, I'm not exaggerating. I saw this in IMAX about two weeks ago and when the camera panned up to the second wave and that musical crescendo came in, I nearly went deaf. I really wished I would have experienced this in IMAX for my first viewing, but this almost felt like my first anyway.
See this is why we need machine bodies. We cant go into space in human form. Our bodies are not built for that. We need bodies that we can upload into. Strong machine bodies that can withstand gravity, and all forms of matter.
I’ll never understand why she went back for the data. I realize the previous scientist died for that data, but this planet is obviously uninhabitable. What good is the data?
The size of wave is partially influenced by the depth of the water. That's why waves dissipate when they hit land. Ther is NO way a wave could be that big in water that shallow.
The wave is that big because it’s pulling the entire ocean due to how tides work when orbiting a black hole. They landed in “shallow” water because they landed at the bottom of the ocean.
@@drg8687 Those are not wind waves those are tidal waves. Do you not know about tides? If you don't then I'm not wasting my time explaining something to you that you clearly don't understand.
@@drg8687 because you'll probably argue with me. A tidal wave is a shallow water wave caused by the gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. This is the kind of wave you see in interstellar, it is a MASSIVE tidal wave covering the surface of the planet and there are always two of them on opposite sides of each other on the planet. Earth has these but they're only a few meters high not thousands because we're not orbiting a black hole.
@@barneyrubble4293 and yet gravity still can't make waist deep water have waves taller than the empire state building. It's not magic bro, it's gravity.
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Love how the music emphasizes the horror of the waves.
During the water planet scene, you hear a ticking sound every 1.4 seconds. This signified the passing of a day on Earth. One hour = 3600 seconds. Seven years = 2556 days (2257 if you include two leap years). 3600/2556 = 1.4.
Astrophysicist Kip Thorne was a consultant for the film and provided guidance to make Gargantua look realistic. Bear in mind this was before we got an actual image of a black hole, and even then the representation was spot on.
The ticking sound in the music indicates the passing of days.
He looked at that wave coming for a 1 min 23 sec in earth time, he had plenty of time. 😁
those gigantic waves caused by the gravitational waves of gigantua !
Do you think Nolan wrote in the script:
(Wave nearly at ship)
(Doyle stares at wave instead of getting into ship)
(Wave splashes water on ship)
(Doyle continues to stare at wave instead of getting on ship)
(Wave hits Doyle)
(Doyle still doesn't get on ship)
He currently weighs something like 270-300 lbs 135 kg and is exhausted. He stood aside to let Brand make it safely! Brand is the entire mission! Brand can restart humanity with embryos (or her body)
He may even share Mann's foreknowledge. (iykuk)
@@Alvin-1138 exactly and to add to that he is seeing something that's never been seen before. It's easy to get caught up in the moment and freeze up.
@@tristenmoles7933 I froze up just seeing it in IMAX, friend.. 😂 It almost scaled perfectly like you were looking up at the same angle as standing there.
When I say it was the loudest thing I've ever heard in a theater, I'm not exaggerating. I saw this in IMAX about two weeks ago and when the camera panned up to the second wave and that musical crescendo came in, I nearly went deaf. I really wished I would have experienced this in IMAX for my first viewing, but this almost felt like my first anyway.
See this is why we need machine bodies. We cant go into space in human form. Our bodies are not built for that. We need bodies that we can upload into. Strong machine bodies that can withstand gravity, and all forms of matter.
This scene and the docking scene were so stressful and gave anxiety... but such a master piece
That wave looks like the 1958 Lituya Bay tsunami.
It's funny that Mathew knew that it was a wave, in real life ...he surfs!!! So he can tell when big wave is coming!!!🏄♂️😂
This film has so many incredible moments.
The most incredible movie soundtrack of all time
I’ll never understand why she went back for the data. I realize the previous scientist died for that data, but this planet is obviously uninhabitable. What good is the data?
This movie is incredibly stupid, but a lot of people find it amazing.
And why did they choose to go the planet that has the extreme time dilation first?
It’s not that surprising, people get tunnel vision under pressure and try to keep doing what they were just doing even if it no longer makes sense.
I would have said into comms: "CASE, get Doyle NOW, we're leaving Brand here." See if THAT got her dumbass to turn around.
did you get a youtube message regarding appeal? if you did can you tell me what you did to overcome it?
The size of wave is partially influenced by the depth of the water. That's why waves dissipate when they hit land. Ther is NO way a wave could be that big in water that shallow.
The wave is that big because it’s pulling the entire ocean due to how tides work when orbiting a black hole. They landed in “shallow” water because they landed at the bottom of the ocean.
@@barneyrubble4293 wind is what causes waves
@@drg8687 Those are not wind waves those are tidal waves. Do you not know about tides? If you don't then I'm not wasting my time explaining something to you that you clearly don't understand.
@@drg8687 because you'll probably argue with me.
A tidal wave is a shallow water wave caused by the gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth.
This is the kind of wave you see in interstellar, it is a MASSIVE tidal wave covering the surface of the planet and there are always two of them on opposite sides of each other on the planet. Earth has these but they're only a few meters high not thousands because we're not orbiting a black hole.
@@barneyrubble4293 and yet gravity still can't make waist deep water have waves taller than the empire state building. It's not magic bro, it's gravity.
I swear Natalie Gold has the worst camera setup, shes always looking so far right its weird lol
First
I knew you could do it! We all believed in you!
@@ovalofsand Thanks, appriciate it!