TheKaeptain
Banned
Also before I saw this film I though black holes are wormholes.
So these are two different things huh?
http://cbsn.cbsnews.com/?id=fjIWVjQ_C2QP1t18WC4mpOc_DJH_2FD5
Also before I saw this film I though black holes are wormholes.
So these are two different things huh?
Coops ship gets shredded by (nearly) light speed debris when he's descending into Gargantua.
When I saw that, I was grinning like a kid. I had big posters of those on my wall when I was growing up. They just seemed like the coolest things ever.
People get on Nolan for telling instead of showing but this was one of the times where Nolan absolutely portrayed something visually. Note how Nolan zoomed out when Mann and Cooper started fighting. They looked small compared to their background and the whole point of that shot was to show how petty and insignificant our shit is compared to the world.1. Petty, unneeded, and artificial human conflict just for the sake of "drama"
i think at that scene it was light acting as a particles as gravity is acting on light and slowing it to non relativistic speeds.
People get on Nolan for telling instead of showing but this was one of the times where Nolan absolutely portrayed something visually. Note how Nolan zoomed out when Mann and Cooper started fighting. They looked small compared to their background and the whole point of that shot was to show how petty and insignificant our shit is compared to the world.
I wasn't fond of the Mann stuff the first time I watched it but I really appreciate what Nolan was doing with it now. It really does give a bigger thematic element to the work as a whole, much more so than the love aspect.
Mann acts in such a human manner and it's that basic behaviour and instinct of ours, that almost completely sinks the mission.
But that idea literally stands athwart the whole theme of the movie that the power of love transcends physics and shit. The Whole Thing is that humans aren't small and insignificant that we can force significance.
But that idea literally stands athwart the whole theme of the movie that the power of love transcends physics and shit. The Whole Thing is that humans aren't small and insignificant that we can force significance.
So, I'm trying to piece together some problems I had with the movie, but I'm a little fuzzy on the details. Someone let me know if I've got this right.
They send these crews out to find planets that may be habitable. Because of "wormhole problems" when the people find these planets, they can only send back very little information to Earth. Basically a "Yes, come here" or a "No, this place sucks" message. After sending crews to check 12 planets, 3 crews send back a "Yes, come here" message. So Coop and the crew fly through the wormhole to these planets, all orbiting around the same star. There's also a massive blackhole in the system that makes things trickier, especially on the Water Planet because of time dilation.
Good so far?
So, I'm trying to piece together some problems I had with the movie, but I'm a little fuzzy on the details. Someone let me know if I've got this right.
They send these crews out to find planets that may be habitable. Because of "wormhole problems" when the people find these planets, they can only send back very little information to Earth. Basically a "Yes, come here" or a "No, this place sucks" message. After sending crews to check 12 planets, 3 crews send back a "Yes, come here" message. So Coop and the crew fly through the wormhole to these planets, all orbiting around the same star. There's also a massive blackhole in the system that makes things trickier, especially on the Water Planet because of time dilation.
Good so far?
Yes.
Okay, that's what I thought. So the people on Earth didn't know the situation on these planets because the information couldn't be sent through the Wormhole. However, was it impossible for Coop and the crew to communicate with the people on these planets before they landed? Like, once Coop et al. went through the Wormhole, couldn't they have radio'd down to the planets to make sure shit was cool?
Everyone was assumed to be in stasis.
Okay, that's what I thought. So the people on Earth didn't know the situation on these planets because the information couldn't be sent through the Wormhole. However, was it impossible for Coop and the crew to communicate with the people on these planets before they landed? Like, once Coop et al. went through the Wormhole, couldn't they have radio'd down to the planets to make sure shit was cool?
Ah, that makes sense. I must have missed something. Still kind of a dumb plan, though.
Ah, that makes sense. I must have missed something. Still kind of a dumb plan, though. Wouldn't you want the stasis to be able to be deactivated by a person in orbit. Otherwise, there's no way for those in orbit to tell the difference between a planet that's dangerous and a planet where people are sleeping. But I guess then there wouldn't really be a movie, so it's whatever.
People get on Nolan for telling instead of showing but this was one of the times where Nolan absolutely portrayed something visually. Note how Nolan zoomed out when Mann and Cooper started fighting. They looked small compared to their background and the whole point of that shot was to show how petty and insignificant our shit is compared to the world.
I wasn't fond of the Mann stuff the first time I watched it but I really appreciate what Nolan was doing with it now. It really does give a bigger thematic element to the work as a whole, much more so than the love aspect.
Mann acts in such a human manner and it's that basic behaviour and instinct of ours, that almost completely sinks the mission.
They don't have a Star Trek-style view screen that willenhancemagnify down to the stasis pod. What if they deactivated the stasis while the camp is buried under 20 feet of snow?
I suppose that's true. I missed a bit before they went down to this planet because I needed to use the bathroom, so that's why I'm confused on this part. It seems to me like a planet with a crew in an unknown status, so close to a black hole, with enormous relativistic effects at play should be the last planet you check, not the first. My girlfriend told me they argued about that, but I don't know how they reached their conclusion.
The problem with all that is I don't buy into the movie critiquing itself at that point because the whole thing is played up for suspense leading into the ship stealing and docking scenes. He almost sinks the mission because it's the Crazed Stranded Human Scientist going crazy who almost sinks the mission. It feels tropey and undermines the more legitimate conflict of Man vs. The Universe on this planet finding mission that had a lot more heft and natural drama inherently built into it.
I suppose that's true. I missed a bit before they went down to this planet because I needed to use the bathroom, so that's why I'm confused on this part. It seems to me like a planet with a crew in an unknown status, so close to a black hole, with enormous relativistic effects at play should be the last planet you check, not the first. My girlfriend told me they argued about that, but I don't know how they reached their conclusion.
Their plan was that they would do a quick get in/get out. Grab Miller and her data, give the dude time to study the black hole while they were gone.
Basically, Edmund's planet was 2 months away. If that didn't work out, they'd have to travel all the way back here, and, considering time, fuel, and life support as resources, they decided to just check in on Miller's planet as quickly as possible, rather than risking spending four months total going to Edmund's planet, where they hadn't received a signal from in a while.
Not an entirely unreasonable decision, considering they were trying to save the human race. Four months worth of life support and fuel is monumentally higher than a few hours worth, of course; they weren't planning on getting stranded down there for a couple hours.
The problem with all that is I don't buy into the movie critiquing itself at that point because the whole thing is played up for suspense leading into the ship stealing and docking scenes. He almost sinks the mission because it's the Crazed Stranded Human Scientist going crazy who almost sinks the mission. It feels tropey and undermines the more legitimate conflict of Man vs. The Universe on this planet finding mission that had a lot more heft and natural drama inherently built into it.
The film really wasn't about Man vs. the Universe but rather man undermining himself. NASA had been trying to save the human race but the public is too shortsighted to see what needs to be done. While there are definitely dangers involved with space travel and nature in general, we as humans fucked ourselves over more than nature did.
If male Brand had been more honest for example, NASA might have tried to come up with some strategy to get the data Brand needed for the gravity equation.
The problem with all that is I don't buy into the movie critiquing itself at that point because the whole thing is played up for suspense leading into the ship stealing and docking scenes. He almost sinks the mission because it's the Crazed Stranded Human Scientist going crazy who almost sinks the mission. It feels tropey and undermines the more legitimate conflict of Man vs. The Universe on this planet finding mission that had a lot more heft and natural drama inherently built into it.
My girlfriend told me they argued about that, but I don't know how they reached their conclusion.
Wait, if that's their logic, than it doesn't make sense. They knew about relativity, right? It's risking a possible loss of four months against a definite loss of at least 7 years. You should take the four months every time. Even if they were in and out of the planet in 10 minutes, the people on the ship would lose more than a year.
looked REALLY goodMatt Damon
Like damn
Do we have any idea what caused the Blight?
He almost sinks the mission because it's the Crazed Stranded Human Scientist going crazy who almost sinks the mission.
The data coming from Miller's planet was apparently the most promising by far, as it contained organic compounds and water. Then again, it's orbiting a black hole and experiences relativistic effects at 61,320x that of Earth. I still maintain that it should have been a last resort, not the first stop.
Brand even mentioned that Edmunds' planet was a better option than Mann's because of the black hole, and that "not enough can happen" to support life when the planet is so close to a gravitational singularity.
I was under the impression that there's a minimal loss of resources when the people on the big ship are under stasis and not really going anywhere.
1. They send 3 probes first to see which are habitable, they found out at that point that information can only go TO the probes but data cannot be passed back from the Probes
2. They send the Lazarus mission to 3 planets, one person per planet. 2 sent back a blip of existence and 1 did not.
3. They sent cooper and his team to see and verify what is going on with Team A B and C. They also sent embroys for growing on these planets
4. No one knew the planetary conditions of these planets as the data for what kind of planet it is was not passed back to earth so Coopers team was going in blind.
True, you do save a lot of fuel not going anywhere, but there's still life support and stuff that needs to be provided. I don't know how much fuel you would need to use just to not fall into the black hole, either. But I'm willing to give the characters the benefit of the doubt and say they did the calculus and it made sense for them.
Wait, if that's their logic, than it doesn't make sense. They knew about relativity, right? It's risking a possible loss of four months against a definite loss of at least 7 years. You should take the four months every time. Even if they were in and out of the planet in 10 minutes, the people on the ship would lose more than a year.
Serious? Thought he looked fat and tired
Do we have any idea what caused the Blight?
Not if he's in stasis most of the time.
Of course he didn't stay in stasis the entire time (even though he should have), and they never addressed the effect there.
Anyone ON the ship can stay in stasis, if they want.
If they traveled to Edmund's planet and it was inhabitable, that's four months worth of fuel and life support, used up.
If they had only spent an hour, or two, on Miller's planet, they would have only lost 7-14 years, and 1-2 hours worth of fuel and life support.
They can't save the human race if they don't have fuel/life support to do anything.
EDIT: Yeah, it was a risk they took, and they paid the price. I'm glad they at least discussed it.
Alright. Thanks for clearing these things up for me. Did they say how much time passed between sending the original probes to the planet and Coop et al. going out to find them? I assume it must have been a long time.
The film really wasn't about Man vs. the Universe but rather man undermining himself. NASA had been trying to save the human race but the public is too shortsighted to see what needs to be done. While there are definitely dangers involved with space travel and nature in general, we as humans fucked ourselves over more than nature did.
If male Brand had been more honest for example, NASA might have tried to come up with some strategy to get the data Brand needed for the gravity equation.
Mann wasn't crazy or maniacal. In fact, he was more rational and pragmatic than any other character aside from Brand. He was simply doing what he thought was absolutely necessary to preserve the future of the human race.
Why didn't he just tell them when they got there that his initial readings were wrong or that his theories about the planet didn't pan out?
Mann wasn't crazy or maniacal. In fact, he was more rational and pragmatic than any other character aside from Brand. He was simply doing what he thought was absolutely necessary to preserve the future of the human race.