This is the only movie that has ever made me actually cry, and no matter how many times I watch it it still makes me cry every single time. Such a good film. I also have to appreciate just how good of an antagonist Matt Damon was in this, most people don’t appreciate beyond the face-value annoyance of him just how accurate a depiction of a self-righteous coward who can’t live with his own choices would act in desperation.
Just what is it with Matt Damon? He always needs to be saved. Normandy, Boston, Mars, and now in another galaxy....WTF, Matt? What is your problem? Looks like there IS a sign on your back that says "SAVE ME"..... 😉😉
@@Stogie2112 I believe it’s been estimated that in all of his roles combined it has fictionally cost somewhere between 800 billion to 1 trillion saving Matt Damon from his various situations.
The "years of messages" scene breaks me every single time. Seeing Tom go from proud new father, to mourning his son and grandads death in one tape is harrowing.
This movie is 𝗣𝗛𝗘𝗡𝗢𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗔𝗟, an absolute 𝗠𝗔𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗥𝗣𝗜𝗘𝗖𝗘, my all time favorite movie! Watching it in the theater was mind blowing, pure cinematic magic. Hans Zimmer’s score is a brilliant achievement, adding depth to every moment. Beyond its storytelling, Interstellar made real scientific contributions, with its depiction of black holes leading to new research and published papers; cementing its groundbreaking status. This isn’t just a movie; it’s a cinematographic treasure by Christopher Nolan.
Makes sense that you're watching this movie, as Christopher Nolan directed it and you just watched Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. You're gradually making your way through Nolan's catalog.
They shouldn't have gone to the Miller's planet in the first place. Once they knew that 1h=7 years, that would mean that the previous ship landed there just over an hour ago, so they wouldn't even have time to analyze the planet even if it was inhabitable
Very true but as they said before they left they got only rudimentary binary signals out from the wormhole while they could easily send things through, it isn't explained why this is but they had no way of knowing what signals Miller was throwing out unless they physically went there
No kidding, there wouldn't even be any substantial data to analyze in the first place! The only data would likely only be "gravity is 1.3g's, the atmosphere is made of X, Y, Z, and the water is composed of A, B, C." There is literally nothing to be learned
Yes! It’s not literally a hole. It’s an optical illusion (caused by the extreme gravity bending the light so much) that makes it LOOK like there’s a “hole in space” because no light is escaping from the star. There’s light, it’s just not visible at a great distance the way other stars can be seen at a distance. From here it looks like a black spot in the sky, surrounded by a bright ring. A WORMhole, on the other hand, is (theoretically) an actual hole in the fabric of spacetime. Nobody knows what it would actually look like, but I love the way it was created in this film!
There’s no friction or resistance in space, which is why the ship is spinning. If you push something in space it’ll keep going at the same speed forever until it hits something, or gets close enough to something where gravity will alter it.
@@Myhaay .... When Endurance went into orbit around Mann's planet, it was not spinning. It has to be still in order to allow safe docking and undocking. When the docking bay decompressed and the ranger collided with Endurance, those forces made Endurance spin uncontrolled.
The Tesseract that is in the black hole was built by future humans, very distant future humans, ones that have learned to transcend time and space (the 4 dimentions). They placed the wormhole near Saturn too. There is some dialogue about that between Cooper and TARS when they're in the black hole. Such a masterpiece of a movie. What's crazy is that while this concept within the black hole is certainly out there and completely speculative, the rest of the movie is actually very scientifically accurate. There's even a book written about it, by Kip Thorne, who was the science consultant on the movie, he's a highly regarded theoretical physicist. So it's not like your typical Hollywood space movie with inaccuracies all over the place. The black hole depiction was actually based on real physics and computer simulation. Christopher Nolan went to great lengths to make the science as accurate as possible. Time dilation is an actual thing, which is the warping of space and time in the presence of objects with massive gravitational pull, in this movie that object is the black hole. In fact, all objects warp space and time to one extent or another, the gravitational pull of an object relative to its mass.
Mate, let me tell you: I watched the movie in 2015 for the first time and I was teary eyed. I rewatched it with my Missus in 2019. Being a Dad since 2018, this movie hirs way much more when you have Kids. It broke me. This movie is a Masterpiece and a half. Great reaction Mate! Love from Germany!
One thing that a lot of people don't pick up the first watch through is that on Miller's planet (the water planet), gravity is much stronger than on Earth, because of the proximity to Gargantua. Therefore, moving, running etc. are all much harder to do. That's why when Brand falls over in the water she can't even lift scrap metal off of herself. I think she saw the wave but overestimated how quickly she could grab the data and get back to the ranger, not being used to moving under such conditions. It may seem like a stupid decision, but in the heat of the moment, an easy oversight.
Nope, you’re mixing two things up. The gravity of the planet is what makes it harder to move, if the planet is larger than Earth. Gargantua’s gravity only affects how fast time moves due to the bending of space-time near the black hole, including on the planet.
The gravity from Gargantua wouldn't make the gravity on Miller's planet stronger. If anything, it might make some areas feel lighter because those areas are being pulled towards the black hole (the same way the Moon pulls water towards it, creating tides on earth).
" I don't know if that moon landing was real...." Yes, it was real. The Apollo missions were real. So were the Mercury and Gemini missions that came before them. There were 15 Apollo missions along with several other missions in support of the program, which began in the early 1960's Apollo 1 was a disaster. All three astronauts died in a fire on the launch pad in 1967. Apollo 11, 12, 14, 15, 16 and 17 all put astronauts on the moon during the years 1969-1972. Apollo 13 was almost a tragedy. The crew made it back to Earth safely.
you talked a lot about millers planet (the water planet) The planet doesn't get sucked into the black hole because it is in a stable orbit around Gargantua, just like any other celestial body in a stable orbit around a massive object like a star or a black hole. The stability of an object's orbit depends on its speed and distance from the massive object it is orbiting. In the case of Miller's planet, it is at a distance from Gargantua that allows it to maintain a stable orbit. The gravitational pull of the black hole keeps the planet in orbit without it getting pulled directly into the black hole.
it was not Tars and Cooper that made the wormhole. It was the furture humanity (most likely type 5 civilisation) that put the wormhole there, so that cooper and murph could save humanity and therefor also the future humans, who put the wormhole their. Its all a time loop
I'm sure there's a lot of biochemistry involved in farming, especially in a world where the soil is extremely challenging to grow food in. EDIT: Basically the idea that we don't need to go to school for farming is one of the reasons why the world of this movie is so barren and the soil so infertile.
Nutrient deficiencies overtime will allow diseases to take hold and after the lack of regenerative farming that we are currently demonstrating, it’s no wonder agriculture ended up on the precipice of extinction due to our over indulgences once again but yes your point stands solid, lack of ‘quality’ education leads exactly to this.
@@Zubstep1315not to mention the earth is always changing on its own, think of how many ages we know it’s been through and how many species have gone extinct because of those changes.
Tars explained very well... "They saved us... in their 5 dimention" and he explains how THEY open a teseracto showing Murph's bedroom to help cooper to choose how to comunicate with her. As soon as he does. They transport him BACK in time and through the worm hole to saturn where he is rescued by a patrol. It is amazing.
My favourite Christopher Nolan movie glad you got to enjoy it😊 btw fun fact every frame of the black hole took 100 days to render because Christopher wanted it to look as accurate and real as possible😎🤘 this movie has peak soundtrack ong🗿
One of the best philosophical issues that this film presents is that of death and sacrifice. No matter how smart we are or what we do for a living, can we still do our duty in the face of certain death? Dr. Mann couldn't handle the terror of loneliness and certain death. It drove him mad, and he was the most trusted of all the Lazarus pilots. How do any of us know what we would do? Until we face that situation, we can never be sure.
Farming on that level needs a lot of managing skills, chemistry, biology, species and whatnot. You cant train someone in just 10 years to be a good farmer, honestly. It's not just hard work, it's intellectually challenging. It's not a farmer in the 1900s. It's like being a farmer now, and that on an industrial-ish level, knowing how to deal with an everchanging baseline (earth changes, weather changes, features of the plans themselves change all the time in the reality of this movie)
The space craft was spinning to create artificial gravity. Just like a car going fast around a corner it will force you in the opposite direction of the turn.
We went to the moon Don 😂 there’s photographic evidence. markings left by the rover on the moon on photos taken from space not long ago, and those photos match the tracks that were left there all that time ago. It’s funny when you watch videos of people yelling at the astronauts saying what they did wasn’t real, and how utterly disgusted and upset they react. Because that’s one of their life accomplishments and people just say they didn’t do it when they did.
This movie left me feeling really weird I remember when I first watched it I loved the movie so much that I watched it again right after I finished it the first time to look at all the hidden details it’s such a good movie
Oh nOOOO this movie changed my perspective on LIFE. Watching this at 14 created a core memory Also what I love about this movie is all the older people are supposed to be us. The grandfather was born in 97 :)
The emotions that I had during this movie and still get them. I've never had watching another movie ever! Absolutely insane cast, directed insanely good, and the overall plot of the movie is amazing.
The greatest movie to ever be made is this movie. I saw it in theatre and had an experience I’ve never had before watching a movie. This is well before it’s time.
It's a common misconceptions that black holes suck things in but they don't. They have an effective radius of influence from they gravitational field that captures objects. As long as you are outside this realm of influence then you're all good.
Well that’s not it exactly. Gravity pulls everything towards it, so technically anything with gravity “sucks”, though more appropriate to say pulls, you in. It’s just that if you have enough speed moving parallel to the gravitational body at the right altitude, it can’t adjust your trajectory enough to make you collide with it, and thus you have an orbit.
Yes it’s just like if someone in space was approaching earth, eventually earths gravity will have an effect on them and they’ll start getting pulled towards the planet. Obviously the major difference is that if you have the right equipment you can escape earths gravitational pull but if you go beyond a black holes event horizon there’s no known way of escaping it yet
this movie sits comfortably in my top 5, and has yet to be deposed from its spot at number 5. it still makes me cry at least twice to answer the question of who put the wormhole near saturn: time becomes a physical dimension much like space to an evolved humanity that has gone beyond the normal constraints. it was a Future Humanity that put it there.
This is one of my favorite films. The soundtrack grabs me and the whole film is simply incredible.. Watched this movie really high with my friends. When the ship started spinning to catch the station my friend fell out of his chair and then threw up.
So the reason why he gave the other guy the earphones, is because up in space is quiet, and the earphone were playing sounds that you hear when your on earth, its to clam his nerves
its not fully her fault on the wave planet. she says cooper wanted to get home, and she's not wrong there - he wants to save time to have a chance at going home to see his family again, whereas she's (supposedly) willing to die for the mission, or sacrifice decades of earth-time, if it means she gets access to the data left on that wave planet. she still should have followed orders, but it wasn't 100% unjustified.
I think a lot of people missed the point of the ending when brand looked all upset on edmonds planet. But realise how she has her helmet off and breathing air. Thats means Edmonds planet was a habitable planet in which if the earth was destroyed by another natural disaster that wasnt the blight. They have a habitable planet they can go to now. Alot of people missed that detail.
Re-watching these absolute legends is really refreshing especially because of the shit we're being fed by marvel and DC, but these remind me of what films should be like.
Maybe the wormhole was made by the humans at Miller's, cause they survived and became a high tech society. And then, used what they learned to save the Earth humans
Its spinning to simulate Earth's gravity. They say "1 G" and they stop floating, 1 G is a mathematical constant for gravity's effect on Earth, what we normally experience, 2 G would be double what we normally experience - you would feel twice as heavy as you normally are in a 2 G environment. The first water planet from memory was 1.7 G so it was harder for them to move about on it compared to Earth.
Fun fact: The Dust Bowl was actually a real thing that happened in the Midwest of the United States. The scenes of dust getting any and everywhere was actually people’s everyday lives during the 30s.
When Brand was stating her case for Edmund's planet, I never felt that her character was blinded by emotion. Love is quantifiable despite it's mysterious nature. After the disastrous events on Miller's planet, I can understand why Cooper didn't feel comfortable allowing Brand to make the decision. Although I consider myself more pragmatic, it is difficult to ignore intuition. Heavy weights on the scale.
As soon as someone says they dont think the moon landing is real I no longer take them as a serious intelligent adult lol No one well educated has ever said those words and its obvious why, not to everyone mind you but it is lol Anyway other than that, good reaction I love this movie its my favorite
Your comment about all the Nation's working together to solve a problem reminds me of the movie "The Arrival", highly recommend watching it. Thanks for sharing your reaction
This is my favorite single movie of all time. My fav trilogy is LOTR, and my fav saga is Star Wars. But no single movie will ever beat interstellar. This movie is perfection. Absolute perfection.
The planet near the black hole would not be sucked into the black hole, black holes don't suck like most people think they do, if you replace our sun with a black hole that has the exact same mass as our sun, the orbits of everything around the sun/black hole would remain completely unchanged, granted we'd be dead because of the lack of sunlight but still.
yo love your reaction and happy to see you enjoyed it a lot. after 3 hours, yes exactly, i need more! Interstellar (2014) by Christopher Nolan is one of my top movies as well. Music, story, character building, actor actress performancetop notch , truly convincing relationships, out of the world interesting concepts, TARS & CASE as bots, and did i say the phenomenal music?! Its a masterpiece. Since you like it, you should watch another masterpiece called Inception (2010), also by Christopher Nolan
5:38 Are you for real right now? We have live broadcasted footage of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon, and you're unsure of we did it or not?
Out of all the reactors and stuff on youtube he is mostly the only guy that literally notices everything and makes a lot of sence everytime. He might not be a science guy , but the dude is very intelligent. I will give him the pass on that one lol
I've grown up in the countryside in the midwestern united states and I definitly can say for sure there are FAR more to learn about farming than 98% of the population knows. Yes learning on the job is the best, but going to school for farming/ranching teaches you many many things that arent exactly learned hands on, like all the different breeds of animals, how to care for some and spot their medical needs yourself, crops, soil types and what grows best in that soil type, how long it takes to grow, best fertilizers for each type of crop, and when it's that crop is best harvested, and all about the many different types of heavy machinery you'll need, etc...
You need both practice AND theory to become a farmer. Especially in the setting of this movie where you don't need just simple workers, but great specialists to recover or at least sustain the remaining crops. I'm omw to getting masters in agrochemistry and soil science. And there's so much more fields to study. Crop protection, genetics and selection, agricultural technology etc. It's an insane amount of knowledge.
I think you missed the line where they said that the future, 5th dimensional beings took him from the black hole and dropped him out of the wormhole near Saturn. It' was only one line, so easy to miss. You'll probably catch it the next time you watch the film.
The fact that educated person publicly doubt the Moon Landing makes me extremely frustrated about our time. I'm from ex-USSR country and I know that americans landed the Moon. Not believe, not assume - I KNOW that, as a fact.
If you want to watch something regarding the Moon Missions, I'd *highly* recommend watching "Epic History TV" and their 3-part Apollo Program trilogy! I don't know if you'd understand some of the things shown in there, but they go over the several moon missions, as well as the accidents & the details about the pilots, prior to the missions, and a few other details that I didn't even know of (and I'm very infatuated with things regarding space)! Anywho, I like how you had so many questions, which can add to the commentary (which personally I really like commentary, despite how it may be disapproving to other viewers). Great reaction!
This is the only movie that has ever made me actually cry, and no matter how many times I watch it it still makes me cry every single time. Such a good film.
I also have to appreciate just how good of an antagonist Matt Damon was in this, most people don’t appreciate beyond the face-value annoyance of him just how accurate a depiction of a self-righteous coward who can’t live with his own choices would act in desperation.
fr tho
Just what is it with Matt Damon? He always needs to be saved.
Normandy, Boston, Mars, and now in another galaxy....WTF, Matt? What is your problem? Looks like there IS a sign on your back that says "SAVE ME"..... 😉😉
@@Stogie2112 matt savethem
@@Stogie2112 I believe it’s been estimated that in all of his roles combined it has fictionally cost somewhere between 800 billion to 1 trillion saving Matt Damon from his various situations.
@@Syntex366....LOL....nice! Damon had better start making payments today!
The "years of messages" scene breaks me every single time.
Seeing Tom go from proud new father, to mourning his son and grandads death in one tape is harrowing.
TARS was a real fully functioning prop. Meaning they didn't use any CGI for it. I thought that was neat.
Alive?????? 😝
@@Common_Elandno
Technically it’s a puppet. It’s not fully functioning. It works the same way a puppet does.
_Digital effects were brought in later for a few select scenes and to clean up any instances of Irwin in the film_
So ur saying it was fully capable of roasting everyone around him as well?
Don, the reason the ring of the ship spins is to simulate/recreate the effects of gravity.
Centrifugal force
@@demonticklerthat’s what I think but they did say centrifuge earlier in the movie maybe the words work in tandem
This movie is 𝗣𝗛𝗘𝗡𝗢𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗔𝗟, an absolute 𝗠𝗔𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗥𝗣𝗜𝗘𝗖𝗘, my all time favorite movie! Watching it in the theater was mind blowing, pure cinematic magic. Hans Zimmer’s score is a brilliant achievement, adding depth to every moment. Beyond its storytelling, Interstellar made real scientific contributions, with its depiction of black holes leading to new research and published papers; cementing its groundbreaking status. This isn’t just a movie; it’s a cinematographic treasure by Christopher Nolan.
Makes sense that you're watching this movie, as Christopher Nolan directed it and you just watched Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. You're gradually making your way through Nolan's catalog.
If he watches Kung Fu Panda, Man of Steel and Pirates of the Caribbean he's going the Hans Zimmer route....
Oh wait
Can’t wait for him to watch Memento and Tenet
Literally me earlier this year lol
@@DrewsterRooster37😂😂
They shouldn't have gone to the Miller's planet in the first place. Once they knew that 1h=7 years, that would mean that the previous ship landed there just over an hour ago, so they wouldn't even have time to analyze the planet even if it was inhabitable
Very true but as they said before they left they got only rudimentary binary signals out from the wormhole while they could easily send things through, it isn't explained why this is but they had no way of knowing what signals Miller was throwing out unless they physically went there
No kidding, there wouldn't even be any substantial data to analyze in the first place! The only data would likely only be "gravity is 1.3g's, the atmosphere is made of X, Y, Z, and the water is composed of A, B, C." There is literally nothing to be learned
Black holes don’t “suck you up”, they aren’t vacuum cleaners. You can orbit a black hole just like we orbit the sun
Yes! It’s not literally a hole. It’s an optical illusion (caused by the extreme gravity bending the light so much) that makes it LOOK like there’s a “hole in space” because no light is escaping from the star. There’s light, it’s just not visible at a great distance the way other stars can be seen at a distance. From here it looks like a black spot in the sky, surrounded by a bright ring.
A WORMhole, on the other hand, is (theoretically) an actual hole in the fabric of spacetime. Nobody knows what it would actually look like, but I love the way it was created in this film!
@@tamarleighim wonder if we are gonna live enough to actually know what happen inside a black role
There’s no friction or resistance in space, which is why the ship is spinning. If you push something in space it’ll keep going at the same speed forever until it hits something, or gets close enough to something where gravity will alter it.
While your point is true, the reason it’s spinning is to create artificial gravity
@@sawder34 yes, but the station was spinning even faster due to the crash which applies what he says here, just saying.
@@Myhaay .... When Endurance went into orbit around Mann's planet, it was not spinning. It has to be still in order to allow safe docking and undocking.
When the docking bay decompressed and the ranger collided with Endurance, those forces made Endurance spin uncontrolled.
@@Stogie2112 my bad, i don't know why i thought it was already spinning, the point i was trying to make is still there though.
An object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force.
fun fact: the first words Murph says in the very beginning of the movie are "I thought you were the ghost"
The Tesseract that is in the black hole was built by future humans, very distant future humans, ones that have learned to transcend time and space (the 4 dimentions). They placed the wormhole near Saturn too. There is some dialogue about that between Cooper and TARS when they're in the black hole. Such a masterpiece of a movie.
What's crazy is that while this concept within the black hole is certainly out there and completely speculative, the rest of the movie is actually very scientifically accurate. There's even a book written about it, by Kip Thorne, who was the science consultant on the movie, he's a highly regarded theoretical physicist. So it's not like your typical Hollywood space movie with inaccuracies all over the place. The black hole depiction was actually based on real physics and computer simulation. Christopher Nolan went to great lengths to make the science as accurate as possible. Time dilation is an actual thing, which is the warping of space and time in the presence of objects with massive gravitational pull, in this movie that object is the black hole. In fact, all objects warp space and time to one extent or another, the gravitational pull of an object relative to its mass.
Falling into hole wasn’t accurate no red and blue shift
I always cry like a baby when they return from the planet after 23 years and he sees the videos of his kids.
Yeah, it was 2+23+51=76 years for everyone else, but only a few weeks (at most) for Cooper.
Mate, let me tell you:
I watched the movie in 2015 for the first time and I was teary eyed.
I rewatched it with my Missus in 2019. Being a Dad since 2018, this movie hirs way much more when you have Kids. It broke me.
This movie is a Masterpiece and a half.
Great reaction Mate! Love from Germany!
One thing that a lot of people don't pick up the first watch through is that on Miller's planet (the water planet), gravity is much stronger than on Earth, because of the proximity to Gargantua. Therefore, moving, running etc. are all much harder to do. That's why when Brand falls over in the water she can't even lift scrap metal off of herself. I think she saw the wave but overestimated how quickly she could grab the data and get back to the ranger, not being used to moving under such conditions. It may seem like a stupid decision, but in the heat of the moment, an easy oversight.
Nope, you’re mixing two things up. The gravity of the planet is what makes it harder to move, if the planet is larger than Earth. Gargantua’s gravity only affects how fast time moves due to the bending of space-time near the black hole, including on the planet.
The gravity from Gargantua wouldn't make the gravity on Miller's planet stronger. If anything, it might make some areas feel lighter because those areas are being pulled towards the black hole (the same way the Moon pulls water towards it, creating tides on earth).
Gargantuanmakes the waves with its gravity it doesnt increase the planets actual gravity
" I don't know if that moon landing was real...." Yes, it was real. The Apollo missions were real. So were the Mercury and Gemini missions that came before them.
There were 15 Apollo missions along with several other missions in support of the program, which began in the early 1960's
Apollo 1 was a disaster. All three astronauts died in a fire on the launch pad in 1967.
Apollo 11, 12, 14, 15, 16 and 17 all put astronauts on the moon during the years 1969-1972.
Apollo 13 was almost a tragedy. The crew made it back to Earth safely.
Next you'll tell me the world is round
@@peterwinters8587😂😂😂😂😂😂
@peterwinters8587 oh dang, I thought it was cube shaped
you talked a lot about millers planet (the water planet) The planet doesn't get sucked into the black hole because it is in a stable orbit around Gargantua, just like any other celestial body in a stable orbit around a massive object like a star or a black hole.
The stability of an object's orbit depends on its speed and distance from the massive object it is orbiting. In the case of Miller's planet, it is at a distance from Gargantua that allows it to maintain a stable orbit. The gravitational pull of the black hole keeps the planet in orbit without it getting pulled directly into the black hole.
Except an hour for 7 years is too close buddy. It is getting sucked with those kinda waves.
@@Kbax3614 I don’t think you know what you’re talking about?💀
it was not Tars and Cooper that made the wormhole. It was the furture humanity (most likely type 5 civilisation) that put the wormhole there, so that cooper and murph could save humanity and therefor also the future humans, who put the wormhole their. Its all a time loop
I'm sure there's a lot of biochemistry involved in farming, especially in a world where the soil is extremely challenging to grow food in.
EDIT: Basically the idea that we don't need to go to school for farming is one of the reasons why the world of this movie is so barren and the soil so infertile.
Nutrient deficiencies overtime will allow diseases to take hold and after the lack of regenerative farming that we are currently demonstrating, it’s no wonder agriculture ended up on the precipice of extinction due to our over indulgences once again but yes your point stands solid, lack of ‘quality’ education leads exactly to this.
@@Zubstep1315not to mention the earth is always changing on its own, think of how many ages we know it’s been through and how many species have gone extinct because of those changes.
I am addicted to these Interstellar reactions :D
Omg same! And cry every time they cry in the emotional bits. I don't know why I do this to myself 😂😂
Me too. Lol.
Me three 😅
lol.. Same😆
Tars explained very well... "They saved us... in their 5 dimention" and he explains how THEY open a teseracto showing Murph's bedroom to help cooper to choose how to comunicate with her. As soon as he does. They transport him BACK in time and through the worm hole to saturn where he is rescued by a patrol. It is amazing.
My favourite Christopher Nolan movie glad you got to enjoy it😊
btw fun fact every frame of the black hole took 100 days to render because Christopher wanted it to look as accurate and real as possible😎🤘
this movie has peak soundtrack ong🗿
Each frame only took 100 hours to render not 100 days
The black hole scene is some minutes long, stop and think rationally for a minute.
This is the best Christopher Nolan film, if not one of the greatest movies ever made. Cinematic perfection, so glad you watched it.
The Dark Knight!
But Interstellar is definitely top 5
One of the best philosophical issues that this film presents is that of death and sacrifice.
No matter how smart we are or what we do for a living, can we still do our duty in the face of certain death?
Dr. Mann couldn't handle the terror of loneliness and certain death.
It drove him mad, and he was the most trusted of all the Lazarus pilots.
How do any of us know what we would do? Until we face that situation, we can never be sure.
SOUNDS like homeboy needs to watch "Arrival" as well.
Farming on that level needs a lot of managing skills, chemistry, biology, species and whatnot. You cant train someone in just 10 years to be a good farmer, honestly. It's not just hard work, it's intellectually challenging. It's not a farmer in the 1900s. It's like being a farmer now, and that on an industrial-ish level, knowing how to deal with an everchanging baseline (earth changes, weather changes, features of the plans themselves change all the time in the reality of this movie)
The space craft was spinning to create artificial gravity. Just like a car going fast around a corner it will force you in the opposite direction of the turn.
This movie is incredible, it makes you excited to see for what happens next & the plot twists are amazing. That ending always gets me
We went to the moon Don 😂 there’s photographic evidence. markings left by the rover on the moon on photos taken from space not long ago, and those photos match the tracks that were left there all that time ago.
It’s funny when you watch videos of people yelling at the astronauts saying what they did wasn’t real, and how utterly disgusted and upset they react. Because that’s one of their life accomplishments and people just say they didn’t do it when they did.
Im glad you apologized to Brand lol she was right the whole time.
This movie left me feeling really weird I remember when I first watched it I loved the movie so much that I watched it again right after I finished it the first time to look at all the hidden details it’s such a good movie
Oh nOOOO this movie changed my perspective on LIFE. Watching this at 14 created a core memory
Also what I love about this movie is all the older people are supposed to be us. The grandfather was born in 97 :)
the docking scene is absolutely unreal cinema. Deserves an Oscar just on it's own. Holy shit!
The emotions that I had during this movie and still get them. I've never had watching another movie ever! Absolutely insane cast, directed insanely good, and the overall plot of the movie is amazing.
The greatest movie to ever be made is this movie. I saw it in theatre and had an experience I’ve never had before watching a movie.
This is well before it’s time.
Been my number #1 movie for bout three years now nothin comes close. love that you watched it!
It's a common misconceptions that black holes suck things in but they don't. They have an effective radius of influence from they gravitational field that captures objects. As long as you are outside this realm of influence then you're all good.
Well that’s not it exactly. Gravity pulls everything towards it, so technically anything with gravity “sucks”, though more appropriate to say pulls, you in. It’s just that if you have enough speed moving parallel to the gravitational body at the right altitude, it can’t adjust your trajectory enough to make you collide with it, and thus you have an orbit.
Yes it’s just like if someone in space was approaching earth, eventually earths gravity will have an effect on them and they’ll start getting pulled towards the planet. Obviously the major difference is that if you have the right equipment you can escape earths gravitational pull but if you go beyond a black holes event horizon there’s no known way of escaping it yet
this movie sits comfortably in my top 5, and has yet to be deposed from its spot at number 5. it still makes me cry at least twice
to answer the question of who put the wormhole near saturn: time becomes a physical dimension much like space to an evolved humanity that has gone beyond the normal constraints. it was a Future Humanity that put it there.
YESSS 🎉 So happy you're reacting to this, it's my favourite movie of all time
This is one of my favorite films. The soundtrack grabs me and the whole film is simply incredible..
Watched this movie really high with my friends. When the ship started spinning to catch the station my friend fell out of his chair and then threw up.
Interstellar is definitely one of the greatest movie that I have ever seen. Awesome reaction!
Glad you liked that one. It’s one of those sad but satisfying movies I’m happy to watch over every now and then if I see it on.
This is probably my favourite movie. I am so glad you watched this and enjoyed it.
So the reason why he gave the other guy the earphones, is because up in space is quiet, and the earphone were playing sounds that you hear when your on earth, its to clam his nerves
34:23 "The fifth dimentional n****s" got me laughing my ass off NGL hahahahahaha
“I knew you would come back” “how” “because my dad promised me” get me everytime😢😢😢😢🥺🥺🥺🥺😢🥺😢🥺
Don if u love this than u should definitely watch "The Martian"
That movie redeemed Matt Damon's character in this movie lol
Yessss
I like that one too, but it's a very different movie.
fun fact: christopher nolan hates using cgi, so the scene inside the black hole was a three-story set they built themselves!
I like you kept the scene where he calls his wife "the calmer one". Many reactors leave it out, while I think it was a very powerful line about him.
its not fully her fault on the wave planet. she says cooper wanted to get home, and she's not wrong there - he wants to save time to have a chance at going home to see his family again, whereas she's (supposedly) willing to die for the mission, or sacrifice decades of earth-time, if it means she gets access to the data left on that wave planet. she still should have followed orders, but it wasn't 100% unjustified.
I think a lot of people missed the point of the ending when brand looked all upset on edmonds planet. But realise how she has her helmet off and breathing air. Thats means Edmonds planet was a habitable planet in which if the earth was destroyed by another natural disaster that wasnt the blight. They have a habitable planet they can go to now. Alot of people missed that detail.
4th dimensional space is such a beauty
YES I WAS NOT EXPECTING THIS! OMFG this is the best movie!
Re-watching these absolute legends is really refreshing especially because of the shit we're being fed by marvel and DC, but these remind me of what films should be like.
Maybe the wormhole was made by the humans at Miller's, cause they survived and became a high tech society. And then, used what they learned to save the Earth humans
Its spinning to simulate Earth's gravity. They say "1 G" and they stop floating, 1 G is a mathematical constant for gravity's effect on Earth, what we normally experience, 2 G would be double what we normally experience - you would feel twice as heavy as you normally are in a 2 G environment. The first water planet from memory was 1.7 G so it was harder for them to move about on it compared to Earth.
Fun fact: The Dust Bowl was actually a real thing that happened in the Midwest of the United States. The scenes of dust getting any and everywhere was actually people’s everyday lives during the 30s.
Now we just need Inception and you’re fully a Christopher Nolan fan🙏🏼
What about the prestige!!!
I watched this movie well over 50 times.. truly a master piece!
Total creds on this gent catching more on what was going on on the latter part of the flick.. Because i didn't initially..
I love how there are still people who have never seen Interstellar, so I can see their raw reactions
Another great one that's right up there with Interstellar, at least for me, is The Martian.
Also has Matt Damon (Dr Mann) and Jessica Chastain (Murph) in it.
interstellar is probably my fav movie ever.
This is one of my favourite movies of all time, it´s just perfect. Love your reactions man!
Love this reaction video thanks man! You picked up on it quicker than most people and it's fun to watch
When Brand was stating her case for Edmund's planet, I never felt that her character was blinded by emotion. Love is quantifiable despite it's mysterious nature.
After the disastrous events on Miller's planet, I can understand why Cooper didn't feel comfortable allowing Brand to make the decision.
Although I consider myself more pragmatic, it is difficult to ignore intuition.
Heavy weights on the scale.
I cried like a baby in this movie...and then they spoke about the power of love and ruined it.
As soon as someone says they dont think the moon landing is real I no longer take them as a serious intelligent adult lol No one well educated has ever said those words and its obvious why, not to everyone mind you but it is lol Anyway other than that, good reaction I love this movie its my favorite
Your comment about all the Nation's working together to solve a problem reminds me of the movie "The Arrival", highly recommend watching it.
Thanks for sharing your reaction
I Love How TARS Becomes From Copper’s Rival To The “Living Thing” He Loves Most.
This is my favorite single movie of all time. My fav trilogy is LOTR, and my fav saga is Star Wars. But no single movie will ever beat interstellar. This movie is perfection. Absolute perfection.
Spinning it simulates gravity by using the force from the spinning
One of my all time favourite movies this. And like you, wanted more after 3 hours. Amazing movie.
17:00 spinning to simulate earth's gravity
The planet near the black hole would not be sucked into the black hole, black holes don't suck like most people think they do, if you replace our sun with a black hole that has the exact same mass as our sun, the orbits of everything around the sun/black hole would remain completely unchanged, granted we'd be dead because of the lack of sunlight but still.
I love when people watching have no idea what’s happening this far past the sandstorm and school scene 😅😂
yo love your reaction and happy to see you enjoyed it a lot. after 3 hours, yes exactly, i need more!
Interstellar (2014) by Christopher Nolan is one of my top movies as well. Music, story, character building, actor actress performancetop notch , truly convincing relationships, out of the world interesting concepts, TARS & CASE as bots, and did i say the phenomenal music?! Its a masterpiece.
Since you like it, you should watch another masterpiece called Inception (2010), also by Christopher Nolan
Now you NEED to watch Tenet and the other movies from Christopher Nolans Catalouge! You will Love em all I think!
moon landing was very real my friend. hahahaha just had to say. Good video I subbed.
50:30 I was waiting for the realization 🤯
Idk why but “the fifth dimensional 🥷s” has me absolutely fucking dying 😂😂😂
Top 5 all time. And it never gets old.
5:38 Are you for real right now? We have live broadcasted footage of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon, and you're unsure of we did it or not?
Out of all the reactors and stuff on youtube he is mostly the only guy that literally notices everything and makes a lot of sence everytime. He might not be a science guy , but the dude is very intelligent. I will give him the pass on that one lol
I've grown up in the countryside in the midwestern united states and I definitly can say for sure there are FAR more to learn about farming than 98% of the population knows. Yes learning on the job is the best, but going to school for farming/ranching teaches you many many things that arent exactly learned hands on, like all the different breeds of animals, how to care for some and spot their medical needs yourself, crops, soil types and what grows best in that soil type, how long it takes to grow, best fertilizers for each type of crop, and when it's that crop is best harvested, and all about the many different types of heavy machinery you'll need, etc...
You need both practice AND theory to become a farmer. Especially in the setting of this movie where you don't need just simple workers, but great specialists to recover or at least sustain the remaining crops. I'm omw to getting masters in agrochemistry and soil science. And there's so much more fields to study. Crop protection, genetics and selection, agricultural technology etc.
It's an insane amount of knowledge.
Interstellar is my favourite movie of all time ong
17:00 spinning it creates an artificial earth-like gravity inside.
Everything in the movie happens in mid-late 21th century
glad you decided to watch the greatest movie of all time😁
Yeah, the whole world DID come together in this movie. Remember what he said, there were no more armies.
I think you missed the line where they said that the future, 5th dimensional beings took him from the black hole and dropped him out of the wormhole near Saturn. It' was only one line, so easy to miss. You'll probably catch it the next time you watch the film.
One of the best movies ever
Christopher Nolan is probably my favorite director. PLEASE WATCH THE PRESTIGE
The fact that educated person publicly doubt the Moon Landing makes me extremely frustrated about our time.
I'm from ex-USSR country and I know that americans landed the Moon. Not believe, not assume - I KNOW that, as a fact.
We actually landed a few times. It’s really frustrating that this false narrative has propagated.
Bro this is the best movies of all time
16:10 I believe getting to mars is around 6 months if im not mistaken...
i was thinking that too
if you’re in the space mood again, you gotta check out Dune from 2021
beautiful movie just like all Nolan's others both visually and story wise it was captivating!
If you want to watch something regarding the Moon Missions, I'd *highly* recommend watching "Epic History TV" and their 3-part Apollo Program trilogy!
I don't know if you'd understand some of the things shown in there, but they go over the several moon missions, as well as the accidents & the details about the pilots, prior to the missions, and a few other details that I didn't even know of (and I'm very infatuated with things regarding space)!
Anywho, I like how you had so many questions, which can add to the commentary (which personally I really like commentary, despite how it may be disapproving to other viewers).
Great reaction!
Fucking years ago and I'm still fucking crying.
I love this movie so much. Hello from Germany.