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Interstellar spoiler thread. All spoilers go in here.

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Just finished it, saw it originally day of release at the cinema in IMAX. Great movie, not perfect but on a visual and audio level is one of the best in a long long time. Goddamn.
 
First impressions, while they're fresh in my head.

It tried very much to be 2001, even the score, during the very first scene with the crash, I half expected to hear Also Spracht Zarathustra. I get it, it had references, and homages, but still, it tried, maybe too much.

It had it's plot holes, as with any movie (location of the planets, the amount of ships they had, but suddenly not enough fuel etc.), all or most can be forgiven, or explained away of course.

A few plot points very also very predictable, water planet, first thing that popped in my head was tsunami-wave, ice planet, yepp, crazy scientist, etc.

Very beautiful though, the visuals were at times breathtaking.

All in all, an enjoyable movie, but nowhere near the masterpiece all my friends (and most the internet for that matter) said it would be.
 
Good movie. Obviously the visuals are amazing (the robot design was super cool), and the emotions worked well in parts.

The movie does drag however. I feel like it's too long and adding Matt Damon as a last minute villain felt unneeded.

Also, space is supposed to be scary, and they just went in the opposite direction with the blackhole as some space wizard bullshit. That kinda twist works better in something like Dr. Who. This didn't feel like the kinda movie in which the lead is supposed to survive at the end.

Of course, the dialogue was clunky in spots, and I had the biggest eye roll at the "power of love stuff"

Disagree. The entire movie is as about a father and his love for his daughter. Space is just a setting. It definitely felt like a movie in which the lead is supposed to survive. Their final scene is a huge emotional payoff that makes the movie.
 
How does ice planet imply crazy scientist? Is this a sci-fi trope I'm unfamiliar with?

Oh, sorry, I was unclear, it wasn't that water planet implies tsunami, or ice planet implies crazy scientist. Just that the plotwise, I expected some struggle, and usually someone goes crazy, and seeing the planet, I assumed the scientist would've probably gone bananas and lied.

It's predictability didn't come from sci-fi tropes, but just how it followed the basic beats of any old movie.
 
I've been eyeing the Target exclusive Steelbook edition for $25 but the Walmart exclusive CE for $23 includes:

Giftset includes the 3-Disc BD Combo, with an entire Blu-ray disc of bonus features, only available on Blu-ray. Packaged in a new "NEO-Pack" packaging featuring beautiful graphics from the film. Also included is a 48-page art book featuring images and copy from the "Interstellar" coffee table book. Lastly, each giftset comes with an actual IMAX film cel, cut from a 70mm print of the film.

The Walmart exclusive seems to me like the best definitive version to get, which one is GAF getting?
 
I've been eyeing the Target exclusive Steelbook edition for $25 but the Walmart exclusive CE for $23 includes:



The Walmart exclusive seems to me like the best definitive version to get, which one is GAF getting?
I ordered the Best Buy one since I had a giftcard, but damn, that Walmart version is tempting.
 
I have a question about TARS: about it learning not to trust Dr.Mann and asking CASE to disable the auto-pilot as a precaution.

How exactly did TARS find out Dr. Mann is not to be trusted? And if he did, why did he not warn the Endurance crew? He did try to warn Romily as the scientist tried to access the datalog left behind by Dr.Mann's AI assistant, but wasn't able to save him in time. This means that at some point between him backing away from Dr.Mann's AI assistant and him returning to warn Romily, he found out about the danger. What exactly was the trigger that led his logic to deduce this?
 
I ordered the Best Buy one since I had a giftcard, but damn, that Walmart version is tempting.

The original price of the Walmart exclusive was $35 before, look's like they dropped the price to $23!

I just pre-ordered the Walmart exclusive from Walmart for $25.03 after tax and includes free standard shipping. It say's arrival is Friday April 3!
 
i really kinda dug the whole quantification of love thing, it's a beautiful sentiment.

i didn't mind the ghost stuff, i don't think nolan was trying to gotcha anyone with the twists.

they should have wrote out the brother, and expanded murph's physics training. the fight scene could have been improved, it was pretty stiff.

everything else was perfect, lovely visuals and music.
 
Question about the ending. Supposedly any information that passes a blackhole's event horizon can never escape. If this is the case, then how was Coop able to send information to Murph? Gravity? Isn't a Singularity basically infinite gravity and infinite space folded in on itself?
 
Question about the ending. Supposedly any information that passes a blackhole's event horizon can never escape. If this is the case, then how was Coop able to send information to Murph? Gravity? Isn't a Singularity basically infinite gravity and infinite space folded in on itself?
Whatever creatures are helping them (probably human ancestors from the future) have some control of spacetime, and created the tesseract for him to manipulate, including being able to affect gravity in limited ways. I guess the implication is that the properties of spacetime within the black hole allow them to do this for him, as well as to send him to a different point in spacetime afterwards.
 
Question about the ending. Supposedly any information that passes a blackhole's event horizon can never escape. If this is the case, then how was Coop able to send information to Murph? Gravity? Isn't a Singularity basically infinite gravity and infinite space folded in on itself?

Well ignoring the "get out of jail free card" of hyper-dimensional post human beings being able to solve this for him with their technology (that was behind the wormhole (wow did auto-correct really try and change this to whore hole?) appearing, the tesseract and getting Cooper/Tars into and out of a black hole) I'm pretty sure that the latest theories on black holes do allow for information leakage in certain cases - i.e. it's not necessarily one way in the right situation.

I should google it but can't be bothered (sorry) but that's what I remember.

On another note I know Kip Thorne was the science advisor and Nolan gave him veto rights on film content that pertained to science ( which I understand he used at least once) so I'm also blithely assuming Thorne wouldn't have allowed the concept to pass unless there was some way to justify it theoretically.
 
Question about the ending. Supposedly any information that passes a blackhole's event horizon can never escape. If this is the case, then how was Coop able to send information to Murph? Gravity? Isn't a Singularity basically infinite gravity and infinite space folded in on itself?


The tesseract is basically at the edge of the singularity. He's not sending it through the blackhole but through the object .
 
http://www.avclub.com/article/bill-irwin-interstellar-robin-williams-steve-marti-216828?

Great interview with Bill Irwin about his many roles, which includes his thoughts on TARS.

AVC: As far as TARS’ vocalizations, how does one determine what sounds like a sense of humor at 75 percent?

BI: Well, you look to Chris Nolan. [Laughs.] As with everything. The character was right there on the page, though, and that was a great relief I had when they finally let me go into a locked room and read the script. Because all the secrecy that they talk about in his films? Absolutely true. But when I read the script, I realized, “Oh, there’s a character here.” And, yes, he’s created artificially by human characters, and they can change his settings, which is just a brilliant character notion, but he’s still a character, and you play him like every other character.

Interestingly, that was—or seemed—the least of Nolan’s concerns. We were figuring out the movement of the robot, and one day he said to me [Does a Christopher Nolan impression.] “Oh, by the way, have you thought about the voice?” And I said, “Yeah, I think he’s kind of an ex-Marine.” “That’s fine.” That’s the only character talk we ever did.
 
Here's the cell that came with my blu-ray. Anyone get any really good ones?

kgFLACDl.jpg
 
I can't tell what the fuck mine is. Did anyone else get the special edition from Walmart? The case it comes in is super nice and it has a little mini art book. Only like $4 more than the regular edition.
 
Just watched it. Amazing movie, although I can see why it might not be everyone's cup of tea.
Just an interesting note not sure if it has been mentioned yet (big thread) the old people talking about the dust are interviews from people who experienced the dust bowl. I recognized two of them from Ken Burns The Dust Bowl I watched on Netflix a few weeks back. Thought that was a nice touch.
 
film is dying and there they are just hacking it to bits and packing it into a blu-ray. Monsters. Philistines. How could Nolan sign off on this wasteful travesty?
 
film is dying and there they are just hacking it to bits and packing it into a blu-ray. Monsters. Philistines. How could Nolan sign off on this wasteful travesty?

35mm production is the one "dying". If anything, IMAX film is only a standard for major productions at this point.
 
35mm production is the one "dying". If anything, IMAX film is only a standard for major productions at this point.

I was being a smartass, though

I used to be a projectionist, and you'd better believe I used to take little "souvenirs" from the booth before we had to send a print back.

Sometimes those souvenirs were whole trailer reels.
 
Just watched it. Amazing movie, although I can see why it might not be everyone's cup of tea.
Just an interesting note not sure if it has been mentioned yet (big thread) the old people talking about the dust are interviews from people who experienced the dust bowl. I recognized two of them from Ken Burns The Dust Bowl I watched on Netflix a few weeks back. Thought that was a nice touch.

Wasn't one of them Old Murph too?
 
I bought the steel book version from Target then just saw it. Mind Blown. The biggest take away from this movie is that it'll make you wanna become a physicist.
 
I've been eyeing the Target exclusive Steelbook edition for $25 but the Walmart exclusive CE for $23 includes:



The Walmart exclusive seems to me like the best definitive version to get, which one is GAF getting?
I love the Walmart edition.
 
His age is given as 124 or thereabouts at the end of the movie. If we assume he's in his mid 40's at the start of the film as the actor is, add the 2 year journey to Saturn, the 23 years they spent on the water planet and the 52 years the maneuver around the Black Hole got them and it doesn't seem he spent any significant amount of time in the tesseract.

He was 35 at the start of the movie, not mid 40's.

You can deduce this because his daughter was 10 when he left + 2 year journey to Saturn + 23 years on the water planet, at which point Jessica Chastain Murph sends him a message that states it his her birthday and they are now the same age.
 
He was 35 at the start of the movie, not mid 40's.

You can deduce this because his daughter was 10 when he left + 2 year journey to Saturn + 23 years on the water planet, at which point Jessica Chastain Murph sends him a message that states it his her birthday and they are now the same age.

Technically didn't Murph send that message previously and he was just watching it then?
 
Technically didn't Murph send that message previously and he was just watching it then?

Couldn't have been much earlier, as the next scene transitions into the present moment with her back on Earth in the lab. She also sends the message of Professor Brandt's death soon afterwards and it seems to get to them on the ice planet pretty quickly.
 
Finally got around to watching this. I'm just such a fanboy when it comes to Nolan movies; I loved everything. Hans Zimmer continues to be one of the best in the business as well.
 
Couldn't have been much earlier, as the next scene transitions into the present moment with her back on Earth in the lab. She also sends the message of Professor Brandt's death soon afterwards and it seems to get to them on the ice planet pretty quickly.

To be fair I think the transition to her talking to the professor was just a transition, and could have easily been a time jump, showing what happened after she had sent it, potentially years before. Open to interpretation, and pretty irrelevant point though :p

For that message, it gets to them quickly because one of the robots transmits it to the ship on the planet. They didn't have that option available for the water planet.
 
Watched this again the other night. One of the little attention to detail things I noticed is the food that Murph was having for dinner when she visits Tom and his family.

On the table was cornbread, corn on the cob, and corn nuggets :)

No wonder Tom seemed like he was kind of crazy :p
 
Here's the cell that came with my blu-ray. Anyone get any really good ones?

kgFLACDl.jpg

Here's my little piece of Interstellar.


Interstellar-Print by S R V A S Q U E Z | instagram @DOSARTE, on Flickr

I've watched it at least 5 times already (I watch all my movies many times). One of the things I didn't catch in the cinema, and there's a lot to miss upon first viewing, was when Cooper gave Romilly an ambience soundtrack to listen to to calm him down. Little tiny thing that was pretty cool.
 
My subwoofer sure got a work out. It even moved a couple inches. SVS cylinders are no joke. Whole house was shaking. No sound in space, that's cool too.

I'm a sucker for people gone made in space. Seeing Matt Damon wake up (Martian, anyone?) and then screw them all over was right in my wheelhouse of love. Not quite Sunshine levels of beautiful surprise but good enough.

TARS and CASE pretty cool. At first I thought wtf is Nolan doing, is he trying to make me laugh unintentionally? In the end I bought in and it worked, odd design and all. TARS especially is helpful until the end.

Nolan's casting for though, almost too much here. Too many familar faces I thought.

And I'll admit, no I didn't think that Cooper was the ghost. Well done Nolan and co. you got me there.

This was Nolan's most ambitious film yet. I can't say that it worked as one cohesive film though. Inception which feels similar in some ways, folding world dream, dreams in general, love, and catharsis all work better in Inception. That movie is still his masterpiece. Unlike TDKR I think this has the chance to get better with repeat viewings.
 
Here's my little piece of Interstellar.


16944850619_d5073392d0_b.jpg


I've watched it at least 5 times already (I watch all my movies many times). One of the things I didn't catch in the cinema, and there's a lot to miss upon first viewing, was when Cooper gave Romilly an ambience soundtrack to listen to to calm him down. Little tiny thing that was pretty cool.
This is what I got. It's actually what I was hoping to get, that or a nice shot of the endurance or black hole. I was pretty surprised and happy with it. The odds of me getting a blurry shot of something random seemed far more likely lol.

ho00qCG.jpg
 
I know it's often been pointed out how the robots resemble the monolith from 2001, but when Cooper was in the tesseract floating in front of vertical lines lines that resolved into shelves of books, did anyone else feel an echo of the scene in 2001 where Bowman was shutting down HAL's higher functions by removing his memory modules? The modules were vertical clear blocks that were arranged much like books on shelves.

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2001-a-space-odyssey-thumb-560xauto-22997.gif
 
One thing I noticed today, when Cooper was driving away from his house, he flipped up the blankets on the seat besides him, to see if Murph was hiding there, it's a nice touch.
 
I know it's often been pointed out how the robots resemble the monolith from 2001, but when Cooper was in the tesseract floating in front of vertical lines lines that resolved into shelves of books, did anyone else feel an echo of the scene in 2001 where Bowman was shutting down HAL's higher functions by removing his memory modules? The modules were vertical clear blocks that were arranged much like books on shelves.

latest


2001-a-space-odyssey-thumb-560xauto-22997.gif

half the movie was an "homage" to 2001, Nolan really went overboard with the references...
 
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