Ellen Burstyn ALWAYS puts in amazing performances. The Exorcist, Requiem for a Dream, just this little bit of Interstellar. She's a truly incredible, and underrated actress who's been doing it her whole life.
Yea I think that's the most powerful line in the whole movie. She's 100 somethings years old on the brink of death and she still didnt lose hope because dad would never break his promise
First time hearing / seeing that line (and the 23 year video messages) in imax you could literally hear people sobbing violently all around you I’ll never forget it. Now I’m regularly reliving those moments through these reaction videos 😅😭
@@nocturnowl_0100it’s an awesome movie so def watch it! The score is great too, but I agree with your pre-judgement. Hans Zimmer’s score for Interstellar was the clear winner for me
The docking scene literally took the entire theatre’s breath away with the scale, the music and the tension of the whole scene. I’ll never forget that experience
The payoff was insane….I always feel as if I’m holding my breath the entire time with the biggest exhale and sigh of relief once it docked. It’s almost as if Nolan’s intent was to make the viewer tense up so much to the point to where they were starting to come up out the chair, mimicking the scene. If so, brilliantly done.
I totally understand you! When I watched it first in 2015, I got teary eyed... but as a father, rewatching it in 2019, it broke me into a puddle of tears!
As a father, watching 20+ years that I missed of my children’s life would devastate me. Feeling like I let them down would take an untold amount of emotional damage on me
I just totally could NOT believe that scene... the effect it had on me (like all of you, as I've found!). This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
@@sathvamp1 There's a lot of movies out there that can make you cry though. If you want some recommendations: The Green Mile, Hachi: a dog's tale, Million Dollar Baby, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List, all these never fail to make me cry. I could watch them a thousand times and would still cry. And also watching other people react to them has the same effect.
Even thinking about it makes me cry. I don't even have kids, I still relate. This is my all time favourite movie. I want Zimmer's score to play when I die.
This movie was a whole different beast when I rewatched it after having kids. Two daughters. I'm just a mess when she refuses to say goodbye to her Dad.
Same here dude. I have seen it many times and it still gets me just as hard every time because I have 2 little girls. A lot of parts get me but especially, “because my dad promised me”. Jesus christ.
I will never get over the docking scene with the organ pulsating in the theater. Whole theater silent, not breathing… just an amazing experience backed by Hans Zimmer incredible score.
I really hope they show this in theaters again next year to mark 10 years since release. Truly one of my favorite films ever, Christopher Nolan is a legend, proven even more so recently with the release of Oppenheimer.
They are showing it here in the UK through the VUE cinema chain..the only downside is they're showing it on the smaller screens..It needs to be watched on the biggest screen possible! lol
You just gotta ask your local theatres idk if they'll let you do IMAX but you can rent a theatre to screen whatever movie you want. Or even connect a console and play a video game like $100 for each movie or 2 hours idk just gotta ask tho
I LOVE that line, because it reminds me of how, there ARE times even in OUR everyday lives when we need to at least TRY to do things that we believe are impossible because they ARE necessary. It also reminds me of this: Try searching on RUclips the phrase "76 days adrift" and you'll find documentaries of Steve Callahan, shipwrecked in the middle of the ocean for 76 days with a way to purify water BUT only fish to eat... what he could catch with a BROKEN spear. True story. Some documentaries point out this part: With the spear broken, he only had a range of about 6 inches and had to WAIT for a fish to swim RIGHT under the spear tip. That means he had to STAY POISED in that "striking position"... no doubt VERY difficult / uncomfortable / painful and without even knowing IF a fish would swim under, after all of that effort. It reminded me very much of how I've had to hunt for JOBS before!
A detail many miss is when he goes through all the messages from 23 years, his son introduces his grandchild Jessie. Then in his next message, mentions his grandfather died and is buried next to mom and Jessie. Crushing...
That's a bit to blame on the cinematography and the actor who played Tom since we were just introduced to Jesse. It was an emotional scene throughout, and the voice in the message was distorted...The music was very moving, and the death of the baby was thrown into us a bit casually. And the camera was on Cooper rather than Tom... the average viewer would be overcome with emotion during that moment. A baby dying due to suffocation is a good enough reason to raise the stakes here, that too the protagonist's grandchild. Could've been done better.
@@Coach-rq6jx its realistic, jessie's death was thrown to us just like it was thrown at coop, he just got all this 23 years of info at once so it makes sense to be confused
Saddest part of the movie for me was when his son kept sending him messages before stopping after the loss of his own child, as well as the end with Murph. Something about seeing your kid go through life and loss as well as your other kid old and dying just hurts.
I remembered the line from later in the film where they talk about his first child dying, but I'd forgotten that it's mentioned on the calls too, and from Cooper's point of view he's just met his grandchild and then they're gone immediately.
I'm really loving Arianna's reactions. She is able to pick up way more subtleties than others. She sees stuff I am only able to notice because I have watched multiple times. One of my favourite moments is Brand trying to unpack "See you on the other side, Coop." and "See you there, Slick." exchange only to be hit with the sudden realization hard. Arianna's realization was equally great.
I’ll never forget the first time I watched this film. The emotional rollercoaster was nothing I’ve ever experienced. The movie did an excellent job intertwining primal instincts.. child-rearing & overall survival Keeping the species alive along with leaving your own ego & children behind is such a foreign concept to everyday thought. The most impressive portion to this film is it seemed so “realistic” even though it was a sci-fi movie. I’ll never forget the hairs on the back of my neck when he said “those are waves” and the huge wave and swell of the music triggered primal instincts I didn’t even know I had. On top of all the emotion wanting to care for your children. There will never be a never film like this.
An ex once said it felt like over acting which is flat out wrong. If someone was experiencing that they’d be an absolute wreck to the point of looking unhinged/insane. The way M.M. hits the manic crying was so spot on.
Plus he actually cried. Matthew McConaughey wasn't shown any of the messages and this was his first reaction. This immediately put him at the top in terms of acting for me.
I watched this movie once, when I first got my house. Decided I'd stay up late and chow on some pizza and thought, "I heard this was good." Fast forward, it's 12 PM, I've got work tomorrow, the pizza is cold now, and I'm balling my eyes out. I had just become a new father too, so every note hit personally.
I’ll never forget the first time I watched this film in the theater. The scene of their ship as a tiny speck just drifting past Saturn was breathtakingly cool and beautiful.
By far my favorite film of all time, so glad you and Maple are caught up! Everything from the cinematography, the music, the way that they induce stress, confusion, sorrow, love etc is just a master class in filmmaking. I don’t know if anything will ever top this movie for me. Everything about it is perfect
Hands down one of the greatest, most incredible movies ever made. The story, the cast, the pacing, emotion…absolutely perfect. Yes, it’s Nolan, so we have high expectations, but it’s really hard for me to decide between either this, or Inception, as my favorite Nolan film. But damn…the icing on the cake is undoubtedly Hans Zimmer’s masterpiece of a score. I saw it in iMax when it came out and I can still remember how sore my face was from the constant smiling, clinching, and crying. Same emotional rollercoaster each and every time, even now with the reaction video. I remember hearing something about Nolan keeping Matt Damon being cast a huge secret because of how significant (albeit brief) his role was.
"That's SO loud" Which is why I'm so happy I saw this premiere in IMAX, the second or third loudest theater experience ever...when they go through the first wormhole it was so loud/intense I remember hearing a clatter and looking up and seeing the acoustic soundproofing ceiling tiles DANCING AND BOUNCING in the drop ceiling frames...
Wow. As a grown man I did not expect to be crying watching a RUclips movie reaction. Holy crap he can deliver lines like the best of them. When he said “because I have it to her” that hit me. And him watching the videos of his kids was some of the best acting I’ve ever seen
I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later. To this day, the only movie that can make me cry upon a RE-watch (or yes even reaction re-watch) is Nimona... THAT one got me a total of 15 times so far!
This. While Interstellar is obviously a great film, the script is definitely the weak link. Like come on how many times have we seen the paper & pencil demonstration?
@@callmeshaggy5166 I figured the pencil and paper thing was a deliberate homage but knowing Nolan it may have just been laziness (before fanboys scream at me, I think the movies good)
@@callmeshaggy5166 Nolan wants to explain it as simply as possible to people who know nothing about space, normies who don't even know what wormholes are, are who this is for.
No one expects when they're told to watch the sci fi movie 'Interstellar' that it will be one of the most moving, gut wrenching, devastating, beautiful, emotional movies about the love between a father and daughter ever made.
I love love love seeing people experience this film. It's my favorite of all time. Makes me very giddy to see others so excited about space 😄 My favorite thing about this film is that all of the special effects that would normally be done post production, was done preproduction. Nolan had his team do this, and then project all those effects onto screens during filming, because he thought it would be better to have actors actually reacting to something instead of some gross green screen. So all the special effects we see - they see too. Anne Hathaway said the first time she saw the black hole while filming she said it was so beautiful it brought her to tears. So very happy that Arianna got to experience this film on the channel! 🤍 The handshake full circle really gets to me. Reaching out from across dimensions, trying to connect..
This movie is a masterpiece. By far my favorite Nolan film, and one of my favorite films of all time. I also like how this capturing of a black hole was done before we actually got images of what one looked like, and it was nearly the same as what was shown in the film. This whole film is spectacular.
This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
The connection that Murph and Cooper had was palpable. They had good on-screen chemistry and it only lent to the audience's connection early on. So when Cooper is watching all of the messages, it actually hits the audience harder that Murph didn't send a single one until that one... And it was devastating! Also, except for the tesseract at the end (where Cooper can see the bedroom and send messages) the science was pretty spot on! Even Gargantua... Theoretical Physicist Kip Thorne was brought on as a science advisor. His modeling was so good that when you see the black hole for the first time, it is pretty awesome. Keep in mind that no one had ever "seen" a black hole! When the first image of a black hole was finally produced (M-87*) in 2019, it looked astonishingly like the black hole in the movie, which came out 5 years before!! This movie was great!
Here's the real impact of Murph realizing her dad was the "ghost": That's how she knows he didn't leave her to die. He tried to make his past self stay on Earth. Why would he do that if he was planning on leaving her the whole time?
Because the older guy manipulated him,telling him he has to go,which in the future he regrets and trys to send an message for his past self not to leave so he doesn’t miss his kid’s childhood
I cant say I like seeing Arianna in distress but it's actually refreshing to see someone have emotions about movies and sad stories. I know too many cinics
As a HUGE fan of astronomy, her excitement during the wormhole scene matched what I felt when I saw it show up for the first time. My only true regret is that I didn't see this in the theater. Instead of being blown away, it would have vaporized me, lol.
There are plenty of emotional scenes in this movie... as Cooper's leaving, the messages scene, when Cooper screams at himself to stay... but when Cooper entered the hospital room and fulfilled his promise of coming back to his daughter, that's when I f*cking BAWLED
YES that was the second scene that got me! This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after that ending scene which made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
Other space movies don’t highlight the vastness of time and generational impact that this movie does. This movie really hits a primal level of survival and love for kin.
@@casperryborg4869 Oh you know how old folk are. I think he’d love the idea of survival for your kin (traversing space for Murph) but hate the idea of sacrificing your kin for the greater good. (Realizing your mission was a farce, and you’re expected to repopulate) And… I CANNOT WAIT FOR ARCANE! Literally the only piece of media that makes me gitty when I hear someone else enjoyed the ride. I need more Ekko in my life… like for real. 🤣
Boy, almost every interaction with Murph and Coop was heart wrenching. I loved the acting and story, but Christopher Nolan is just so good at this. You're not along crying in this, that's for sure. Not just the first time thru, either. Such a fascinating premise, as well. I really need to see a Nolan film in a theater.
Yup, she's definitely not alone! This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P. I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
Your enthusiasm is wonderful. My lady had never watched or been into sci fi untill she met me. She loves it as much as i do now. Loved watching her light up at new ideas.
If you want to know more, there is a book writen by Kip Thorne "The Science of Interstellar". He is focused on relativistic astrophysics and gravitation physics, and also worked with Nolan on the script.
Not normally much of a commenter but really loved how much you were into this one, reminded me very much of how I felt watching it the first time. I didn't cry the last time I re-watched it, but seeing you go through it gave me a little bit of that back this time around. Was rad. Appreciate ya.
I also virtually can't ever cry to a RE-watch of ANYthing (well almost... there is an "exception story" at the end of the comment!). I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later. But like I said... when I tried a re-watch.... nothing. The one "exception" so far has been the movie "Nimona"... if you count not just watches of the movie itself, but watching reactions, and reading/writing comments... Nimona "got me" a total of 15 times (!). I was totally flabbergasted since no movie has ever even been able to do it twice.
The scene with "Because my dad promised me" line and the look for rest and peace Cooper has on his face at the moment he hears that always gets me. I don't have kids, but man, this hits super hard. I've watched this movie over 100 time already, but every single time this movie manages to put tears on my eyes, just like the first time i watched it.
When the movie finished, I stood in the seat of the theater completely overwhelmed for what I saw, feeling so tiny against the cosmic scale reflected in the events of the film in one hand and so devastated for the intensity of the emotions provoked about the special bounds between father and daughter in the other.... to finally react after several minutes and notice the great masterwork I have been so lucky to see. Man.... what a movie.
Your reaction was so beautiful to watch and relate to. The emotional journey that this film takes you on for me personally is 2nd to none. It was such a well crafted story, but at the heart of it were regular people put in incredibly difficult situation’s. The ending is incredibly profound when he sees his daughter and the use of relativity was such a genius choice. I’m surprised that has not been done more in sci-fi movies.
So today is Thanksgiving in Canada. I made the mistake of watching this right before I go spend the day with family and my eyes are puffy as hell. Interstellar is my favorite movie of all time. It's one of the most touching movies ever made. It speaks to love, the human experience, family, desperation, loss, and triumph. It's the only movie I purchased just to watch it in 4k whenever I want. I've seen it probably 10ish times, and I cry like a baby every single time. 41 yr old man here. Thanks for being vulnerable and sharing your reaction with us, you're a softy just like me❤️
Arianna at 5:52 "ooohhfff - I am getting emotional already". Me thinking: You have NO idea 😀 ... 35 minutes later... I smiled with many tears thinking about the confirmation.
Hi, I'm Brazilian, and I had the good surprise of discovering your channel suggested by RUclips, and I say good surprise because you can't imagine how much I identify with your reactions, really, I want you to know that I've been marathoning them all for days your videos, moving me and crying with your reactions, it's been awesome, how good it was to discover your channel, the desire that remains with each video is to run to see each film again, and I confess that most of your videos have awakened this will, and that's exactly what I've been doing, after watching your reactions I'm reviewing the movies; Anyway, I've already said too much, I just wanted to let you know that, and thank you for being able to relive in me the emotions that I once felt when I watched these movies for the first time, thank you, and I wish you and your channel success .
Thank you for Sharing this reaction video . 45 years old , interstellar is the best movie I have see in my life . Emotional rollercoaster ^^ When cooper meet his old daughter ….. no one movie make me cry so much . RIP mom
11:12 I'm glad you mentioned existentialism because the ocean scares me, but space has always put me in an existential crisis if i think about it for too long. With the ocean, it's a fear of the unknown and what could be lurking. With space, it's the thought of such a VOID of almost nothingness. Infinite
The sci-fi always been full of fear, fear of technology, fear of space, fear of aliens etc. but here Nolan change completely the paradigm, the space is something to explore, to understand with astronauts as new Magellan, robots with strong IA are only instruments used by humans that can set even their sincerity rate. In 2001 A Space Odyssey, that is the father of the modern sci-fi, we see HAL9000, here HAL9000 is a human, is Dr. Mann. This is the most scientific sci-fi movies ever made, but it's the most human. Destructive humanity and savior humanity. Lookin at Nolan artistic journey I always thought that knowing a very great scientist like Kip Thorne changed his life.
There is nothing sadder in this universe than the unrelenting, uncompromising passing of time. No matter how much you cry or kick or scream, you can't even slow it down. And you know it's just pushing you closer and closer to your death.
Im pretty sure time can be slowed via Time Dilation. If you were able to travel at the speed of light time would stand still. Time just cannot go backwards.
@@mmxxiii9503 "No little part of the torment of existence lies in this, that Time is continually pressing upon us, never letting us take breath, but always coming after us, like a taskmaster with a whip."
@@dre3k78 yes but if time stands still for you, you won't even notice that time standing still until it picks up again. the whole time dilation thing only works when you have two observers at different points. so in order to slow time for you, it has to speed up for others, relatively. otherwise, time is always just passing normally from one's own perspective. for all we know time stops for our universe every 10 minutes for 100 years. - but since everything is affected, it functionally makes no difference.
Arianna’s reaction shows how powerful this movie is. And it happens with every Chris Nolan’s production, making him the most influential director of XXI century so far.
34:25 as it turns out, this sequence also reveals that young Murphy was telling the truth--the message was “stay”, and sent from him-- from his future self.
Having watched my favourite nolan film so many times and now seeing someone else watch it for the first time and react in the same way at all the key points is pretty amazing.A job well done mr nolan and mr zimmer!
That 23-year time gap video-update always hits me right where it hurts the most! And Matthew's acting is just heart-wrenching, which fits the scene perfectly! Brilliant storytelling!
Your bravery in sticking with us after it finished was something to behold. I’ve seen others go away and collect themselves first. Well done for keeping it raw and real. ❤
Look up the story of Hans Zimmer writing the theme of the movie and how Christopher Nolan asked him to do it. It creates so much more meaning for me knowing how the theme was created and the heart of the movie was found.
This is my favorite movie by far. Nothing has come close. Your reaction, I believe, is how everyone reacted. I've watched this movie many times and as a dad of 2 girls I tear up everytime.
"It's not possible." "No. It's necessary." I think of this probably every day of my life. Any time I doubt myself or think I'm aiming too high and that voice in my head tries to tell me how unlikely it is that I will succeed, I think "I will succeed because I must succeed." Pair that with The Matrix's "There is no spoon" and anything is possible if your will is strong enough.
During the Dust Bowl, it took a sandstorm so big it shut down Washington DC...from the SOUTHWEST before it was taken seriously. All too often a problem doesn't become a problem until it's happening to you. THEN it's a priority.
This film was released the year I lost my Mum. When the final scene came, it hit me like a freight train. Just the thought of me being there as an old man and my Mum just walking in destroyed me
Arianna, this is probably the most invested I've ever seen you in a reaction, it looks like you hit every emotion really deeply. So glad you got watch and experience all of that, thanks for sharing. p.s. from now on I'd suggest always starting with a new box of tissues!
Yep, and that's not random. They worked a lot on the black hole VFX to make it as realistic as possible -- though they did leave two effects out (relativistic beaming, which would have made one part of the disk brighter and part darker, and relativistic doppler shift, which would have made it more blue) as they felt it would've been too confusing. There's a scientific paper on the math of the black hole VFX equations.
Soundtrack vise, it feels criminal to me when hans didn't get the oscar for it, like how relatable they are even today, like for an example play confield chase and just close your eyes, your own movie starts in your head if not interstellar, just mind blowing stuff, you should try that
15:09 he wasn’t cocky at all-at least not in a way that would be unacceptable for their situation; he was being confident and applying his wisdom -- he’s the only experienced human pilot of his level apart of this group-- one of the ONLY FEW ONES LEFT on earth-most of the team, including the robots with them, are legitimately not use to, or NEVER have experienced a pilot using a manual approach in such a landing maneuver-- that only an expert experienced pilot would be able to do. This was the type of stuff that was why they recruited him in the first place-- he’s also a top tier military/NASA level engineer and mechanic. 30:36 and that was the other reason why he was recruited, for those extreme situations as well❤
I like Arianna so much and she basically watches all my favorite movies and shows (True Detective S1 was so great! with Arianna and Maple)... so good! Did Diegesis already do Blade Runner btw?
The scene with the water where every year is marked with a "tick" sound is so subtle and brilliant. Also, you guys should really do a reaction to Enter The Void
Okay Arianna, with you being so hyped by this space movie, we REALLY need to see you stream a complete (episodic?) playthrough of Outer Wilds TOTALLY blind. You would absolutely LOVE it.
i would give anything to be able to watch this movie for the first time again. when i did at the end i just sat in my dark living room in total silence for about an hour just pondering my thoughts. this is an amazing reaction video. i feel like i got to somewhat watch it for the first time again through you so thankyou!
"...Because my dad promised me."
Tears every single time.
Ellen Burstyn ALWAYS puts in amazing performances. The Exorcist, Requiem for a Dream, just this little bit of Interstellar. She's a truly incredible, and underrated actress who's been doing it her whole life.
Literally every single time without fail.
Yea I think that's the most powerful line in the whole movie. She's 100 somethings years old on the brink of death and she still didnt lose hope because dad would never break his promise
First time hearing / seeing that line (and the 23 year video messages) in imax you could literally hear people sobbing violently all around you I’ll never forget it. Now I’m regularly reliving those moments through these reaction videos 😅😭
My daughter looks a little like the little girl in this film and that line gets me EVERY time.
How Hans Zimmer didn't win an Oscar for Best Original Score on this film is still a crime. He got nominated but I'm still bitter he didn't win.
its criminal to me. whoever did win it obviously payed the oscars for it. its one of the most relevant soundtracks even today
The winning score was from The Grand Budapest Hotel by Alexandre Desplat.
@@gz3zbz Never even seen it. I'll give it a shot but I doubt my stance will change that it doesn't compare
@@nocturnowl_0100it’s an awesome movie so def watch it! The score is great too, but I agree with your pre-judgement. Hans Zimmer’s score for Interstellar was the clear winner for me
@@nocturnowl_0100I watched it back then. Amazing movie and score. But Zimmer should've won!
The docking scene literally took the entire theatre’s breath away with the scale, the music and the tension of the whole scene. I’ll never forget that experience
The payoff was insane….I always feel as if I’m holding my breath the entire time with the biggest exhale and sigh of relief once it docked.
It’s almost as if Nolan’s intent was to make the viewer tense up so much to the point to where they were starting to come up out the chair, mimicking the scene. If so, brilliantly done.
Especially if you saw it in IMAX. The music and the scale of it. Amazing
Have you seen gravity??? Saw it in imax!!! Movie made my stomach turn I literally was clinching the seat at the debris scene!😨
@BlackGambit I missed that in IMAX but caught it in cina-capri which was a super wide screen.
@@wildorangesagreed
I've said this before, and I'll say it again. As a Sci-fi fan, this movie blew me away. As a father, it broke my heart.
Aptly put, agree on both fronts.
I think it's the best cinema experience I've had in my whole life. Never been so glued to the screen before. Parasite is the only one that comes close
I totally understand you!
When I watched it first in 2015, I got teary eyed... but as a father, rewatching it in 2019, it broke me into a puddle of tears!
@@GeorgeTropicana Carry your negativity somewhere else, preferably the mirror, and learn.
@@GeorgeTropicana Okay Georgina. Have some cranberry juice and settle down.
The scene where he plays back the messages from his children since the last 23 years. Tears. Just, tears.
As a father, watching 20+ years that I missed of my children’s life would devastate me. Feeling like I let them down would take an untold amount of emotional damage on me
I just totally could NOT believe that scene... the effect it had on me (like all of you, as I've found!). This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry).
I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space.
During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
@@sathvamp1 There's a lot of movies out there that can make you cry though. If you want some recommendations: The Green Mile, Hachi: a dog's tale, Million Dollar Baby, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List, all these never fail to make me cry. I could watch them a thousand times and would still cry. And also watching other people react to them has the same effect.
Even thinking about it makes me cry. I don't even have kids, I still relate. This is my all time favourite movie. I want Zimmer's score to play when I die.
This movie was a whole different beast when I rewatched it after having kids. Two daughters. I'm just a mess when she refuses to say goodbye to her Dad.
Same here dude. I have seen it many times and it still gets me just as hard every time because I have 2 little girls.
A lot of parts get me but especially, “because my dad promised me”. Jesus christ.
Yup. Facts. And let it be clear: I'd STAY. Sorry humanity.
Completely agree. Having kids has really changed the way that certain movies hit me, and this is one of them.
As a father of 3 girls i can vouch for this 1000%
you sound like you touch your daughters when their mom isn't around
19:10 Everyone misses this detail. They buried grandpa next to mom "and Jesse", as in his first child died.
I will never get over the docking scene with the organ pulsating in the theater. Whole theater silent, not breathing… just an amazing experience backed by Hans Zimmer incredible score.
I have no clue who Hans Zimmerman is but Hans Zimmer is epic! ^^
@@EbizzerHH autocorrect ty for taking the time to respond to a typo 🥰
I really hope they show this in theaters again next year to mark 10 years since release. Truly one of my favorite films ever, Christopher Nolan is a legend, proven even more so recently with the release of Oppenheimer.
They are showing it here in the UK through the VUE cinema chain..the only downside is they're showing it on the smaller screens..It needs to be watched on the biggest screen possible! lol
I never got to see this in the Cinema and it kills me because it’s one of my all time greatest films ❤
I can't believe it's been 10 years. Wow. It seems like yesterday.
YES
You just gotta ask your local theatres idk if they'll let you do IMAX but you can rent a theatre to screen whatever movie you want. Or even connect a console and play a video game like $100 for each movie or 2 hours idk just gotta ask tho
"It's not possible." "No, it's necessary." Gets me hyped every time!!💯
I LOVE that line, because it reminds me of how, there ARE times even in OUR everyday lives when we need to at least TRY to do things that we believe are impossible because they ARE necessary. It also reminds me of this: Try searching on RUclips the phrase "76 days adrift" and you'll find documentaries of Steve Callahan, shipwrecked in the middle of the ocean for 76 days with a way to purify water BUT only fish to eat... what he could catch with a BROKEN spear. True story. Some documentaries point out this part: With the spear broken, he only had a range of about 6 inches and had to WAIT for a fish to swim RIGHT under the spear tip. That means he had to STAY POISED in that "striking position"... no doubt VERY difficult / uncomfortable / painful and without even knowing IF a fish would swim under, after all of that effort. It reminded me very much of how I've had to hunt for JOBS before!
A detail many miss is when he goes through all the messages from 23 years, his son introduces his grandchild Jessie. Then in his next message, mentions his grandfather died and is buried next to mom and Jessie. Crushing...
That's a bit to blame on the cinematography and the actor who played Tom since we were just introduced to Jesse. It was an emotional scene throughout, and the voice in the message was distorted...The music was very moving, and the death of the baby was thrown into us a bit casually. And the camera was on Cooper rather than Tom... the average viewer would be overcome with emotion during that moment. A baby dying due to suffocation is a good enough reason to raise the stakes here, that too the protagonist's grandchild. Could've been done better.
@@Coach-rq6jx its realistic, jessie's death was thrown to us just like it was thrown at coop, he just got all this 23 years of info at once so it makes sense to be confused
Some child in palestine lost over 40 relatives.
In one day.
@@nosuchthing8Not the place…
@@nosuchthing8 We do not care.
I was 26 and single when i first watch interstellar, now watching it again, 36 and a dad, it hit me way way harder. Tears rolling down my face.
Saddest part of the movie for me was when his son kept sending him messages before stopping after the loss of his own child, as well as the end with Murph.
Something about seeing your kid go through life and loss as well as your other kid old and dying just hurts.
I remembered the line from later in the film where they talk about his first child dying, but I'd forgotten that it's mentioned on the calls too, and from Cooper's point of view he's just met his grandchild and then they're gone immediately.
The idea of missing your children's lives is a deep kind of hurt.
wish he was there for murph's hospital scene but of course he is likely dead now.
@@Ronin.97 that's true, Murph definitely outlived him
@@MH90yeah it’s very subtle in the phone call. The only mention of it is when he says they buried grandpa next to mom and Jesse
I'm really loving Arianna's reactions. She is able to pick up way more subtleties than others. She sees stuff I am only able to notice because I have watched multiple times. One of my favourite moments is Brand trying to unpack "See you on the other side, Coop." and "See you there, Slick." exchange only to be hit with the sudden realization hard. Arianna's realization was equally great.
I always watch these hoping someone picks up on what TARS and Cooper say to each other and have a similar reaction to Brand, so few seem to notice it
She also caught the NORAD sign on the NASA fence when coop first shows up I never noticed it
The best part of that exchange is they do, in fact, see each other on the other side
I’ll never forget the first time I watched this film.
The emotional rollercoaster was nothing I’ve ever experienced.
The movie did an excellent job intertwining primal instincts.. child-rearing & overall survival
Keeping the species alive along with leaving your own ego & children behind is such a foreign concept to everyday thought.
The most impressive portion to this film is it seemed so “realistic” even though it was a sci-fi movie.
I’ll never forget the hairs on the back of my neck when he said “those are waves” and the huge wave and swell of the music triggered primal instincts I didn’t even know I had. On top of all the emotion wanting to care for your children.
There will never be a never film like this.
Mathew killed it on that messages scene.
An ex once said it felt like over acting which is flat out wrong. If someone was experiencing that they’d be an absolute wreck to the point of looking unhinged/insane.
The way M.M. hits the manic crying was so spot on.
Plus he actually cried. Matthew McConaughey wasn't shown any of the messages and this was his first reaction. This immediately put him at the top in terms of acting for me.
I watched this movie once, when I first got my house. Decided I'd stay up late and chow on some pizza and thought, "I heard this was good."
Fast forward, it's 12 PM, I've got work tomorrow, the pizza is cold now, and I'm balling my eyes out. I had just become a new father too, so every note hit personally.
I’ll never forget the first time I watched this film in the theater. The scene of their ship as a tiny speck just drifting past Saturn was breathtakingly cool and beautiful.
By far my favorite film of all time, so glad you and Maple are caught up! Everything from the cinematography, the music, the way that they induce stress, confusion, sorrow, love etc is just a master class in filmmaking. I don’t know if anything will ever top this movie for me. Everything about it is perfect
“Mountains” is one of my favorite scenes of all time. The track is an all timer
Hands down one of the greatest, most incredible movies ever made. The story, the cast, the pacing, emotion…absolutely perfect. Yes, it’s Nolan, so we have high expectations, but it’s really hard for me to decide between either this, or Inception, as my favorite Nolan film. But damn…the icing on the cake is undoubtedly Hans Zimmer’s masterpiece of a score.
I saw it in iMax when it came out and I can still remember how sore my face was from the constant smiling, clinching, and crying.
Same emotional rollercoaster each and every time, even now with the reaction video.
I remember hearing something about Nolan keeping Matt Damon being cast a huge secret because of how significant (albeit brief) his role was.
"That's SO loud"
Which is why I'm so happy I saw this premiere in IMAX, the second or third loudest theater experience ever...when they go through the first wormhole it was so loud/intense I remember hearing a clatter and looking up and seeing the acoustic soundproofing ceiling tiles DANCING AND BOUNCING in the drop ceiling frames...
Wow. As a grown man I did not expect to be crying watching a RUclips movie reaction. Holy crap he can deliver lines like the best of them. When he said “because I have it to her” that hit me. And him watching the videos of his kids was some of the best acting I’ve ever seen
I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
To this day, the only movie that can make me cry upon a RE-watch (or yes even reaction re-watch) is Nimona... THAT one got me a total of 15 times so far!
I DIED at the “long speech about love” bit. Anne Hathaway does her best with the script, but Nolan’s dialogue in that scene is sooo damn expository
This. While Interstellar is obviously a great film, the script is definitely the weak link. Like come on how many times have we seen the paper & pencil demonstration?
@@callmeshaggy5166 I figured the pencil and paper thing was a deliberate homage but knowing Nolan it may have just been laziness (before fanboys scream at me, I think the movies good)
@@rogercase9982 Agreed.
@@callmeshaggy5166 Nolan wants to explain it as simply as possible to people who know nothing about space, normies who don't even know what wormholes are, are who this is for.
@@VColossalVnot to mention who barely understand math
One of the best movies ever. I cry every time I watch it.
No one expects when they're told to watch the sci fi movie 'Interstellar' that it will be one of the most moving, gut wrenching, devastating, beautiful, emotional movies about the love between a father and daughter ever made.
I love love love seeing people experience this film. It's my favorite of all time. Makes me very giddy to see others so excited about space 😄
My favorite thing about this film is that all of the special effects that would normally be done post production, was done preproduction. Nolan had his team do this, and then project all those effects onto screens during filming, because he thought it would be better to have actors actually reacting to something instead of some gross green screen. So all the special effects we see - they see too. Anne Hathaway said the first time she saw the black hole while filming she said it was so beautiful it brought her to tears.
So very happy that Arianna got to experience this film on the channel! 🤍 The handshake full circle really gets to me. Reaching out from across dimensions, trying to connect..
This movie is a masterpiece. By far my favorite Nolan film, and one of my favorite films of all time. I also like how this capturing of a black hole was done before we actually got images of what one looked like, and it was nearly the same as what was shown in the film. This whole film is spectacular.
As soon as i saw Interstellar and Arianna's name i knew it was gonna be a tear fest. This movie gets me every time, so i don't blame her at all.
This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space.
During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
22:30 "also, Topher Grace, what, out of nowhere."
if you think that's out of nowhere just wait till you see Dr Mann.
The connection that Murph and Cooper had was palpable. They had good on-screen chemistry and it only lent to the audience's connection early on. So when Cooper is watching all of the messages, it actually hits the audience harder that Murph didn't send a single one until that one... And it was devastating! Also, except for the tesseract at the end (where Cooper can see the bedroom and send messages) the science was pretty spot on! Even Gargantua... Theoretical Physicist Kip Thorne was brought on as a science advisor. His modeling was so good that when you see the black hole for the first time, it is pretty awesome. Keep in mind that no one had ever "seen" a black hole! When the first image of a black hole was finally produced (M-87*) in 2019, it looked astonishingly like the black hole in the movie, which came out 5 years before!! This movie was great!
I’ve watched this moving over 50 times and my ass still crying watching this with you 😂
Here's the real impact of Murph realizing her dad was the "ghost": That's how she knows he didn't leave her to die. He tried to make his past self stay on Earth. Why would he do that if he was planning on leaving her the whole time?
Because the older guy manipulated him,telling him he has to go,which in the future he regrets and trys to send an message for his past self not to leave so he doesn’t miss his kid’s childhood
It’s a joy to see high-quality movies through Arianna’s eyes.
Super bright, and with very honest emotions.
I cant say I like seeing Arianna in distress but it's actually refreshing to see someone have emotions about movies and sad stories. I know too many cinics
I've never seen Arianna get so stoked before, I'm glad she enjoyed this movie so much.
As a HUGE fan of astronomy, her excitement during the wormhole scene matched what I felt when I saw it show up for the first time. My only true regret is that I didn't see this in the theater. Instead of being blown away, it would have vaporized me, lol.
@@vodengc520as an amateur astronomer who watched it in IMAX... I only remember that I wanted to scream. It was almost too intense. Cheers, dude.
There are plenty of emotional scenes in this movie... as Cooper's leaving, the messages scene, when Cooper screams at himself to stay... but when Cooper entered the hospital room and fulfilled his promise of coming back to his daughter, that's when I f*cking BAWLED
The messages & the hospital scene get me every time
YES that was the second scene that got me! This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after that ending scene which made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space.
During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
Other space movies don’t highlight the vastness of time and generational impact that this movie does. This movie really hits a primal level of survival and love for kin.
You're so right Benzo.
Btw, what do you think Vanders opinion on this movie is, now that he'll become a raging monster?
@@casperryborg4869 Oh you know how old folk are. I think he’d love the idea of survival for your kin (traversing space for Murph) but hate the idea of sacrificing your kin for the greater good. (Realizing your mission was a farce, and you’re expected to repopulate)
And… I CANNOT WAIT FOR ARCANE! Literally the only piece of media that makes me gitty when I hear someone else enjoyed the ride. I need more Ekko in my life… like for real. 🤣
Boy, almost every interaction with Murph and Coop was heart wrenching. I loved the acting and story, but Christopher Nolan is just so good at this. You're not along crying in this, that's for sure. Not just the first time thru, either. Such a fascinating premise, as well. I really need to see a Nolan film in a theater.
Yup, she's definitely not alone! This is actually THE movie that caused me to discover RUclips reactions! Especially after the SECOND scene that made me shed tears, I thought to myself, "Ok, WHAT is this MOVIE? Does anyone ELSE react like this??" I found out via RUclips reactors... absolutely yup, nearly everyone reacts like me :P. I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space.
During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
Your enthusiasm is wonderful. My lady had never watched or been into sci fi untill she met me. She loves it as much as i do now. Loved watching her light up at new ideas.
One of my favourite movies for sure. The messages scene being easily my favourite of the whole movie, gets me every time
Seeing the black hole scenes in IMAX was insane! This is being re-released in 70mm IMAX in September 2024 and I highly recommend seeing it then.
Its a masterpiece, truly a once in a generation film
i also felt that way about Everything Everywhere All At Once. watch it if you haven't.
If you want to know more, there is a book writen by Kip Thorne "The Science of Interstellar". He is focused on relativistic astrophysics and gravitation physics, and also worked with Nolan on the script.
Not normally much of a commenter but really loved how much you were into this one, reminded me very much of how I felt watching it the first time. I didn't cry the last time I re-watched it, but seeing you go through it gave me a little bit of that back this time around. Was rad. Appreciate ya.
Appreciate you too :)
I also virtually can't ever cry to a RE-watch of ANYthing (well almost... there is an "exception story" at the end of the comment!). I've actually been a tearjerker-seeker ever since (while watching "Inside Out") I felt the feel-good brain endorphins that can get released along with tears (but after that, discovered it was notoriously difficult to find a movie that actually makes me cry). I watched this in 30-minute chunks while eating lunch in front of my computer to save time because... it was required material for a science class, and I was really busy. I knew NOTHING about the movie except that it involved outer space. During the infamous 23-years-of-messages scene, I was really enjoying salad I was eating, so I ended up only half-consciously wondering: "Why are my eyes dripping down my nose?? OH it's because this is a sad scene. And, DARN, I'm half missing it because I'm concentrating on my salad too much!" LOL. I learned to put my food down during any new movie if I sensed something important was coming up and was rewarded by that ending scene when he saw Murph so many years later.
But like I said... when I tried a re-watch.... nothing.
The one "exception" so far has been the movie "Nimona"... if you count not just watches of the movie itself, but watching reactions, and reading/writing comments... Nimona "got me" a total of 15 times (!). I was totally flabbergasted since no movie has ever even been able to do it twice.
The scene with "Because my dad promised me" line and the look for rest and peace Cooper has on his face at the moment he hears that always gets me. I don't have kids, but man, this hits super hard. I've watched this movie over 100 time already, but every single time this movie manages to put tears on my eyes, just like the first time i watched it.
Nolan and Hans is actual magic together.
When the movie finished, I stood in the seat of the theater completely overwhelmed for what I saw, feeling so tiny against the cosmic scale reflected in the events of the film in one hand and so devastated for the intensity of the emotions provoked about the special bounds between father and daughter in the other.... to finally react after several minutes and notice the great masterwork I have been so lucky to see.
Man.... what a movie.
37:31 "because my dad promised me." 😢
The soundtrack is really good and enhances the experience of this movie very much.
Zimmer enhances every movie he scores!!
Your reaction was so beautiful to watch and relate to. The emotional journey that this film takes you on for me personally is 2nd to none. It was such a well crafted story, but at the heart of it were regular people put in incredibly difficult situation’s. The ending is incredibly profound when he sees his daughter and the use of relativity was such a genius choice. I’m surprised that has not been done more in sci-fi movies.
So today is Thanksgiving in Canada. I made the mistake of watching this right before I go spend the day with family and my eyes are puffy as hell.
Interstellar is my favorite movie of all time. It's one of the most touching movies ever made. It speaks to love, the human experience, family, desperation, loss, and triumph.
It's the only movie I purchased just to watch it in 4k whenever I want. I've seen it probably 10ish times, and I cry like a baby every single time. 41 yr old man here.
Thanks for being vulnerable and sharing your reaction with us, you're a softy just like me❤️
I really hope they do a 10th anniversary imax release, I never got to see it in theaters it would be amazing
I would kill for a seat lmao
poor Arianna, this movie is an emotional rollercoaster for sensible people
Arianna at 5:52 "ooohhfff - I am getting emotional already".
Me thinking: You have NO idea 😀
...
35 minutes later... I smiled with many tears thinking about the confirmation.
Hi, I'm Brazilian, and I had the good surprise of discovering your channel suggested by RUclips, and I say good surprise because you can't imagine how much I identify with your reactions, really, I want you to know that I've been marathoning them all for days your videos, moving me and crying with your reactions, it's been awesome, how good it was to discover your channel, the desire that remains with each video is to run to see each film again, and I confess that most of your videos have awakened this will, and that's exactly what I've been doing, after watching your reactions I'm reviewing the movies; Anyway, I've already said too much, I just wanted to let you know that, and thank you for being able to relive in me the emotions that I once felt when I watched these movies for the first time, thank you, and I wish you and your channel success .
This is an annual Father's Day must see viewing. Thank you for the reaction/viewing. No matter how many times viewed this is a masterpiece.
Thank you for Sharing this reaction video .
45 years old , interstellar is the best movie I have see in my life .
Emotional rollercoaster ^^
When cooper meet his old daughter ….. no one movie make me cry so much .
RIP mom
Good timing for Interstellar! I'll probably cry with Arianna during this vid, but I'll jump on starfield after to cheer myself up 🥲
This is so funny-- the last scene of the successful outpost I am like "thats what I am gonna build today in Starfield" lmao.
11:12 I'm glad you mentioned existentialism because the ocean scares me, but space has always put me in an existential crisis if i think about it for too long. With the ocean, it's a fear of the unknown and what could be lurking. With space, it's the thought of such a VOID of almost nothingness. Infinite
The sci-fi always been full of fear, fear of technology, fear of space, fear of aliens etc. but here Nolan change completely the paradigm, the space is something to explore, to understand with astronauts as new Magellan, robots with strong IA are only instruments used by humans that can set even their sincerity rate. In 2001 A Space Odyssey, that is the father of the modern sci-fi, we see HAL9000, here HAL9000 is a human, is Dr. Mann. This is the most scientific sci-fi movies ever made, but it's the most human. Destructive humanity and savior humanity.
Lookin at Nolan artistic journey I always thought that knowing a very great scientist like Kip Thorne changed his life.
There is nothing sadder in this universe than the unrelenting, uncompromising passing of time. No matter how much you cry or kick or scream, you can't even slow it down. And you know it's just pushing you closer and closer to your death.
Im pretty sure time can be slowed via Time Dilation. If you were able to travel at the speed of light time would stand still. Time just cannot go backwards.
"no fortune in the world will buy any second of time,"
@@mmxxiii9503 "No little part of the torment of existence lies in this, that Time is continually pressing upon us, never letting us take breath, but always coming after us, like a taskmaster with a whip."
@@TenTonNuke interesting insight, sir consider myself intrigued
@@dre3k78 yes but if time stands still for you, you won't even notice that time standing still until it picks up again. the whole time dilation thing only works when you have two observers at different points. so in order to slow time for you, it has to speed up for others, relatively. otherwise, time is always just passing normally from one's own perspective. for all we know time stops for our universe every 10 minutes for 100 years. - but since everything is affected, it functionally makes no difference.
Arianna’s reaction shows how powerful this movie is. And it happens with every Chris Nolan’s production, making him the most influential director of XXI century so far.
A masterpiece, through and through. Tears. Every single time. So beautiful!
34:25 as it turns out, this sequence also reveals that young Murphy was telling the truth--the message was “stay”, and sent from him-- from his future self.
Edits going hard as usual 😂😂 that "hmm" after the fast forward was priceless
Having watched my favourite nolan film so many times and now seeing someone else watch it for the first time and react in the same way at all the key points is pretty amazing.A job well done mr nolan and mr zimmer!
That was so good, Arianna. This movie gets me every time, great job as always!
That 23-year time gap video-update always hits me right where it hurts the most! And Matthew's acting is just heart-wrenching, which fits the scene perfectly! Brilliant storytelling!
An absolute masterpiece of a film, not appreciated enough at the time of its release.
Your bravery in sticking with us after it finished was something to behold. I’ve seen others go away and collect themselves first. Well done for keeping it raw and real. ❤
Arianna has the best reactions. Love her!
The music! The MUSIC! It was like another character in the film. It reminded me so much of the theme from The Exorcist
Look up the story of Hans Zimmer writing the theme of the movie and how Christopher Nolan asked him to do it. It creates so much more meaning for me knowing how the theme was created and the heart of the movie was found.
38:58 "... and I don't know when I'm going to be able to get out of them." 🥰
Let's be honest, when Mathew cried watching his now adult daughter we all ugly face cried first time we watched this movie.
Yes, the "no parent should watch their own child die" kills!
I think this might be my favorite reaction from Arianna.
Same
This is my favorite movie by far. Nothing has come close. Your reaction, I believe, is how everyone reacted. I've watched this movie many times and as a dad of 2 girls I tear up everytime.
This movie is (for me) a masterpiece, and the best film ever made.
"It's not possible."
"No. It's necessary."
I think of this probably every day of my life. Any time I doubt myself or think I'm aiming too high and that voice in my head tries to tell me how unlikely it is that I will succeed, I think "I will succeed because I must succeed." Pair that with The Matrix's "There is no spoon" and anything is possible if your will is strong enough.
During the Dust Bowl, it took a sandstorm so big it shut down Washington DC...from the SOUTHWEST before it was taken seriously.
All too often a problem doesn't become a problem until it's happening to you. THEN it's a priority.
This is by far one of the best movies ever made for so many reasons! Still makes me cry watching it for the 4th time. Great reaction!
This film was released the year I lost my Mum. When the final scene came, it hit me like a freight train. Just the thought of me being there as an old man and my Mum just walking in destroyed me
I’m sorry for your loss ❤
Well, Nolan directed this just after losing his father.
Arianna, this is probably the most invested I've ever seen you in a reaction, it looks like you hit every emotion really deeply. So glad you got watch and experience all of that, thanks for sharing.
p.s. from now on I'd suggest always starting with a new box of tissues!
One of the amazing thing about Gargantua is it looks almost exactly like the Picture of a black hole released 5 years after this movies release.
Yep, and that's not random. They worked a lot on the black hole VFX to make it as realistic as possible -- though they did leave two effects out (relativistic beaming, which would have made one part of the disk brighter and part darker, and relativistic doppler shift, which would have made it more blue) as they felt it would've been too confusing.
There's a scientific paper on the math of the black hole VFX equations.
Thank you for posting these. I enjoy your thoughts on these and am grateful to share such an experience with you(and all other viewers).
This movie is a masterpiece 😍
awesome reaction
Soundtrack vise, it feels criminal to me when hans didn't get the oscar for it, like how relatable they are even today, like for an example play confield chase and just close your eyes, your own movie starts in your head if not interstellar, just mind blowing stuff, you should try that
Omg I thoroughly enjoyed that reaction. It does cut deep! I was sobbing right there with you. God damn you Hans Zimmer!!
15:09 he wasn’t cocky at all-at least not in a way that would be unacceptable for their situation; he was being confident and applying his wisdom -- he’s the only experienced human pilot of his level apart of this group-- one of the ONLY FEW ONES LEFT on earth-most of the team, including the robots with them, are legitimately not use to, or NEVER have experienced a pilot using a manual approach in such a landing maneuver-- that only an expert experienced pilot would be able to do. This was the type of stuff that was why they recruited him in the first place-- he’s also a top tier military/NASA level engineer and mechanic. 30:36 and that was the other reason why he was recruited, for those extreme situations as well❤
I like Arianna so much and she basically watches all my favorite movies and shows (True Detective S1 was so great! with Arianna and Maple)... so good! Did Diegesis already do Blade Runner btw?
I think Arianna hasn’t but the other girl has
ah oke thanks. so Maple Blade Runner@@kevincucumber1118
Yeah, Maple did both Blade Runners! Worth the watch for sure!
Last samurai became my favorite movie...til i saw this one. I enjoyed rewatching them with u.
The best movie ever made.
Cooper getting told he needs to go out and save his kids: "Whoof, I'm getting emotional already."
Me: oh this is gonna get rough
My absolute favourite part of this movie that is about love and family is that the main character flat out forgets he has a son.
That definitely kills it a little lmfao.
haha
The son is a little shit bag. probably why he dislikes him so much lol.
True, but the son is for sure dead by the end. Murph was barely alive and she was younger.
Arianna had me crying just watching her, Its really nice when people really follow the movie :)
The scene with the water where every year is marked with a "tick" sound is so subtle and brilliant.
Also, you guys should really do a reaction to Enter The Void
If I remember correctly, every tick is a day (not a year) - but yes, a brilliant way of connecting the score to the plot.
I saw this movie on opening day and honestly I still haven't recovered. Beautiful reaction!
Okay Arianna, with you being so hyped by this space movie, we REALLY need to see you stream a complete (episodic?) playthrough of Outer Wilds TOTALLY blind. You would absolutely LOVE it.
i would give anything to be able to watch this movie for the first time again. when i did at the end i just sat in my dark living room in total silence for about an hour just pondering my thoughts.
this is an amazing reaction video. i feel like i got to somewhat watch it for the first time again through you so thankyou!