I love the irony of Dr Mann, listed as "the best of us," explaining that Plan A was necessary because people will choose to save themselves before others, only to learn that he himself hit the button to be rescued even though it could have jeopardized the fate of humanity.
Mann's betrayal also showed that you can never tell who will perform well in the face of certain death and who will fail. Mann was the leader of the Lazarus missions and Professor Brand's protégé. He also had a big ego. He was quite overconfident that HIS planet would be The One. His hubris destroyed him.
@@Stogie2112 I think dr Mann knew from the get go that his planet wasnt the one. he went on the laceruz (typo?) mission in good faith, but as any human being, the survival instinct got to him and he faltered in the end, by marooning his rescue team, blabbering about he is there to save the human species, yet in the end it just comes down to being a selfish human who wanna save himself, and therefore in his mind justifying his own decision to do so. (hence plan A wasnt real and plan B was, as even dr. Brand (senior) knew, nobody would sacrifice themselves (unless u lie to them, and put their offspring as stake), because he knew ppl are too selfish/protective to ever wanna go on a suicide mission in the first place) Dr Mann bullshitted everyone to save him self, and blabbered about saving the human species, well knowing they would die on that planet (and he also killed Romily because of that), to somewhat try to give them comfort that he is infact the MANN, who is gonna save the species. Just like he spoke to Cooper before and during his betrayal. He tried to comfort him in his last moments, because generally he's probably not a "bad person", but he just went full selfish survival mode if u know what i mean...
100% this. His arrogance in believing he would be the hero and savior of the human race, caused him to lose his mind when it turned out he landed on a dead world and he was faced with the prospect of just dying on that barren world alone. His ego couldn’t allow him to accept it.
@@TheAlkochef he meant before they ever left on the Lazarus mission. Mann assumed he would find a habitable planet. Mann says that he knew as soon as he got there the planet had nothing, and he resisted pressing the thumbs up signal for a few years.
Yeah, dude! The thing I love most about this movie is how everything that happened in that story, good and bad, had to happen exactly as it did for the story to conclude the way that it did.
31:58 I'm sorry, but you sounded like Porky Pig..😂 Really good reaction reguardless. You totally kept up to what was going on so far.. Me, it took like 2-3 times to understand..
On this viewing, it was striking to me that when we were going back and forth between Earth and Mann’s planet, we were being shown a battle being lost on the only two fronts in existence that had a chance to win our survival. As Coop was struggling to breathe, Murph was losing hope galaxies away. From this point on, it was about them taking back ground until ultimately “bridging the gap” , and uniting their efforts to save mankind. Of course. They were just paving the way for future humans to make that bridge possible, which is a major paradox. Even so, this is currently my favorite movie. I love how the practical effects of Nolan holds up every time you see it. People have gotten too aware of CGI, so this approach is far more believable to the eyes.
Cooper and TARS had to detach after burning their thrusters to minimize drag, and in Coopers case, reserve life support for Dr Brand to complete the mission (Plan B).
"Drag" as in mass/weight. Endurance had to be as light (low mass) as possible to maximize Amelia's escape velocity from Gargantua. Conserving life support for Amelia was also necessary, like you said.
With the time passage (10 yrs since Edmunds went through, 2 yrs to get to Saturn, 23 yrs slippage on Miller's planet, 51 yrs slippage slingshotting around Gargantua, and probably at least a year of additional travel), even if we assume Edmunds was relatively young (say 30) when he left, he'd have been ~117 yrs old by the time Brand arrived. There was no way he'd have survived, especially without advanced medical equipment and trained personnel. The interesting thing is, even if they'd have gone straight to Edmunds' planet after Miller's, he would've been in his mid-60's by the time they got there, so the dynamic between him and Brand would've been interesting!
I doubt Edmund wouldn't have been using cryosleep after he landed, so he would've been (appeared) relatively young. From the theory I've read, there was an accident of the sorts (landsliding?) and he died, so that's why there wasn't any transmission, unlike the other two planets who had signal.
Christoper Nolan is a genius! have you watched inception? or Tenet? both movies that are friggin mindblowing :D idk if they're quite as good as interstellar, but they're awesome. ohh! and did you know he directed the batman trilogy with christian bale?
Interstellar space is where you've travelled outside of the sun's heliosphere and no longer feeling the effects of it. Its known as the space between the stars
Love your reaction to this ❤
I love the irony of Dr Mann, listed as "the best of us," explaining that Plan A was necessary because people will choose to save themselves before others, only to learn that he himself hit the button to be rescued even though it could have jeopardized the fate of humanity.
Mann's betrayal also showed that you can never tell who will perform well in the face of certain death and who will fail.
Mann was the leader of the Lazarus missions and Professor Brand's protégé. He also had a big ego. He was quite overconfident that HIS planet would be The One. His hubris destroyed him.
@@Stogie2112 I think dr Mann knew from the get go that his planet wasnt the one. he went on the laceruz (typo?) mission in good faith, but as any human being, the survival instinct got to him and he faltered in the end, by marooning his rescue team, blabbering about he is there to save the human species, yet in the end it just comes down to being a selfish human who wanna save himself, and therefore in his mind justifying his own decision to do so. (hence plan A wasnt real and plan B was, as even dr. Brand (senior) knew, nobody would sacrifice themselves (unless u lie to them, and put their offspring as stake), because he knew ppl are too selfish/protective to ever wanna go on a suicide mission in the first place) Dr Mann bullshitted everyone to save him self, and blabbered about saving the human species, well knowing they would die on that planet (and he also killed Romily because of that), to somewhat try to give them comfort that he is infact the MANN, who is gonna save the species. Just like he spoke to Cooper before and during his betrayal. He tried to comfort him in his last moments, because generally he's probably not a "bad person", but he just went full selfish survival mode if u know what i mean...
100% this. His arrogance in believing he would be the hero and savior of the human race, caused him to lose his mind when it turned out he landed on a dead world and he was faced with the prospect of just dying on that barren world alone. His ego couldn’t allow him to accept it.
@@TheAlkochef he meant before they ever left on the Lazarus mission. Mann assumed he would find a habitable planet. Mann says that he knew as soon as he got there the planet had nothing, and he resisted pressing the thumbs up signal for a few years.
Yeah, dude! The thing I love most about this movie is how everything that happened in that story, good and bad, had to happen exactly as it did for the story to conclude the way that it did.
31:58 I'm sorry, but you sounded like Porky Pig..😂
Really good reaction reguardless. You totally kept up to what was going on so far..
Me, it took like 2-3 times to understand..
i believe Cooper handshake with Brand was him going through wormhole in back direction to his galaxy
That make sense
This movie is a masterpiece.
First reaction video I've seen where someone actually has a clue about a black whole and spaghetti 😊
On this viewing, it was striking to me that when we were going back and forth between Earth and Mann’s planet, we were being shown a battle being lost on the only two fronts in existence that had a chance to win our survival. As Coop was struggling to breathe, Murph was losing hope galaxies away. From this point on, it was about them taking back ground until ultimately “bridging the gap” , and uniting their efforts to save mankind. Of course. They were just paving the way for future humans to make that bridge possible, which is a major paradox. Even so, this is currently my favorite movie. I love how the practical effects of Nolan holds up every time you see it. People have gotten too aware of CGI, so this approach is far more believable to the eyes.
Fun Fact: Each tick you hear in the soundtrack on Miller's planet is equivalent to 1 day on earth.
Came here to post this
The mental fortitude to enter a wormhole
You have to watch it at least twice more. It gets better and better.
this is always gonna be one of my favorite movies of all time.
Cooper and TARS had to detach after burning their thrusters to minimize drag, and in Coopers case, reserve life support for Dr Brand to complete the mission (Plan B).
"Drag" as in mass/weight. Endurance had to be as light (low mass) as possible to maximize Amelia's escape velocity from Gargantua. Conserving life support for Amelia was also necessary, like you said.
@@Stogie2112why did you simply repeat what he said but in extra words?
@@TheGillenium .... Why are you asking me about a harmless post I made two months ago?
You must really be bored. 🙂
@@Stogie2112 oh I didn’t realize you applied an expiration date to your post. I was no more bored than you were when you wrote it.
nolan’s most ambitious project, ever!! emotionally wrecked
One of my favorite films ever 🔥
My first time watching your content and I have to honest that this was a good reaction video Ralphie! So have another subscriber!
Totally agree with you! Definitely earned a sub from me too :)
How the heck did you guess cooper was the ghost? Lol that’s so wild to predict that as a first time watcher.
Impressive guess for sure
Awesome reaction of my favorite movie!!!!😊😊😊😊
With the time passage (10 yrs since Edmunds went through, 2 yrs to get to Saturn, 23 yrs slippage on Miller's planet, 51 yrs slippage slingshotting around Gargantua, and probably at least a year of additional travel), even if we assume Edmunds was relatively young (say 30) when he left, he'd have been ~117 yrs old by the time Brand arrived. There was no way he'd have survived, especially without advanced medical equipment and trained personnel. The interesting thing is, even if they'd have gone straight to Edmunds' planet after Miller's, he would've been in his mid-60's by the time they got there, so the dynamic between him and Brand would've been interesting!
I doubt Edmund wouldn't have been using cryosleep after he landed, so he would've been (appeared) relatively young. From the theory I've read, there was an accident of the sorts (landsliding?) and he died, so that's why there wasn't any transmission, unlike the other two planets who had signal.
I had to pause. Glad your dog's ok ❤
Edmunds was killed by a rock slide while he was sleeping in his pod.
Christoper Nolan is a genius! have you watched inception? or Tenet? both movies that are friggin mindblowing :D idk if they're quite as good as interstellar, but they're awesome. ohh! and did you know he directed the batman trilogy with christian bale?
Interstellar space is where you've travelled outside of the sun's heliosphere and no longer feeling the effects of it. Its known as the space between the stars
It's simply the best movie ever!
Time for Inception next 😊
Probably not that far into the future regards food and weather
Nice one
Great reaction! 😎 If you've not seen it, I highly recommend Arrival. It'll blow your mind. ❤ New sub 😊
Something wrong with your audio bro. Wish i could have finished your reaction but it was very annoying. FYI