What do you want to see a video on next? ALSO: BELIVE!!! Originally in what’s kind of a first cut of this video. I had rotoscoped out an image from the film, and it went in front of the phrase “believe in love” but in the process, In an attempt to get the framing right, I took out the “e” to see if it looked better. Long story short, I cut the roto and forgot to place the E back in and so in turn, we belive in love Lol
Hopefully one day there'll be a second run. Saw it with one of my friends and it was a fantastic experience. Movies are meant to seen in theaters, I feel.
Interstellar is a masterpiece made of with beautiful photography, acting, music and off course scenario. I don't want to see a sequel as lately i hear many demand. Interstellar must remain as it ended.
@@pastordonkoh7692 It's not a Nolan movie but I thoroughly enjoyed Arrival, more than I expected to. It has many of the same storytelling elements Nolan likes to use.
I'll never understand how this movie didn't win or even get indicated for best film in the oscars. This is a true masterpiece with amazing acting, directing, sound track and it even uses real cientific concepts wich makes it even better for me
@@dreamshorizon3093 Yea i agree they are a joke, it took leo dicaprio 2 decades to win his first one after countless amazing performances. He should have atleast 4 or 5 at this point.
hell, i still jump (somewhat) at Mann's shuttle decompression scene, even though i know it's coming every. single. time. just experiencing that particular scene in the theater scared the shit out of me, and then the follow up scene and it's music.... just stuck with me to this day. i can't get enough of this movie and it's easily one of my favorites from Nolan.
@Chris Smith I think 2001 is overated to high hell. Good movie? Yes. Masterpiece? No. Weird its almost like... movies are subjective. Don't post a long comment about how someone's opinion is wrong. Thats just rude and unnecessary.
@Chris Smith Finally got to see "2001: A Space Odyssey" in its entirety recently. For me, it's disjointed and incomprehensible. All the while, I thought the prehistoric ape sequence was a short snippet that 'sets the tone'. But no, it actually ran for 18 minutes. And don't get me started with the final act - the bedroom, the Sentinel overlooking the main character in what is perceived to be in its final breath, and the space fetus in the end.
@@SahilP2648 Every hour on Miller (the water planet) is about 7 years on Earth. There are 3600 seconds in an hour, and (86400 x 365.25 x 7) or roughly 221,000,000 seconds in 7 years, giving us a conversion factor of 221,000,000/3600 ≈ 61400 seconds which pass on Earth for every second spent on Miller. Times this by the interval between each 'tick', and you get 77000 Earth-seconds, about 21 hours. So, each 'tick' you hear is a whole day passing on Earth.
@@kewltony Bruh u just questioning around the comment section, *Without fucking watching the movie* !!! They wanted to find a new planet just like Earth for new colonisation as they can't make every mankind leave the earth, They needed quantum data to solve this after they find out they made 4D space stations which was orbiting the Saturn !!! I'm not going to explain all this just watch the movie OK
Don't worry man,he did get it for dune,which is also a bit sci fi but more about human nature and behaviour and minds. Zimmer Interstellar main score is the best but dune score beats everything else he has done
This movie is probably why Scott's return in Avengers Endgame hit me so hard. To think, in the blink of an eye, you miss your child's life... I can't imagine when time is already so unforgiving as is.
Fun fact: the original version of the score was created by Zimmer before he was presented to the real concept of the movie. He was told the movie was about a child and a father.
A boy and a father, rather. It was important for him to build a score that had that special boy/father relationship, that Nolan didn’t think Zimmer would grasp, if he had known it was a daughter all along.
this makes me wonder if the part about the ticking clock and how each tick is a day was purely coincidental, or if zimmer composed that piece in post production.
Michael Holman the ticking clock was thought about later on. Before he knew what the movie was really about, he wrote the chords (which is the best part of the score)
@@MannexX this made me think. It made me kinda angry at first but then I realized that Cooper and his daughter have indeed a very "father-son relationship". not that a father and a daughter can't have THAT kind of relationship but I'm sure that if someone says father-daughter relationship, people wouldn't think about the one that Cooper had with her, but that is what Nolan had in mind for them and he knew that Zimmer wouldn't understand unless he thought it was a father-son relationship
Nolan is one of the most adept and gifted filmmakers, Interstellar is a cinematic masterpiece, everything from the characters to the execution of its narrative. The soundtracks too, the soundtracks are inconceivably amazing.
I agree. I love his movies. I’m not someone who’s super loyal to any directors or producers, but I come closest with Nolan, I think. I just showed my boyfriend Inception last weekend, the first movie we watched at home together.
While he was send messages back in time to himself, he could have said go into the black hole. It would have saved time, the lives of his crew, and the suffering of billions of people waiting on earth.
Agreed. I fought it hard but I was busted by my girlfriend. She made fun of me while tears rolled down her face. The most intense scene ever for me. Maconahay was amazing. The camera work was amazing. It was heart wrenching.
The "payoff" almost made me drown myself in my own tears. Most people of the fully packed cinema (800 people) were crying. I've not experienced something so powerful in a cinema
Really well what did u get from the movie.. did u even understand what blight is? so u really think going to outer space & jumping into a Black hole is a intelligent way to spent money inorder to solve the issue of blight.. !!
Really Interstellar is several movies inside a movie. There was the water planet, but also the dying Earth, Dr. Mann's deception, Murph's homecoming, Cooper's journey into the singularity and finally his homecoming and return to Dr Brand. Each were very much like separate short stories in side the larger story.
same. I've often thought about what it must feel like to wake up from a coma after years, you cannot understand the time you missed, but you look around and see your family older and realize you have missed so much. I couldnt even begin to imagine the loss one would feel in that moment that felt like hours but was really 23 years, heartbreaking.
Inevitably and quickly spinning clockwise descending to the planet during the docking scene, making each second vital. This rotation being like the time they are losing right now, as they need to be as quick as possible to dock, but also the time they lost forever in this mission. I always saw it this way. It's not really subtle but the docking scene is so strong that we don't need finesse at this very moment haha !
Interstellar is the greatest movie of all time. Nolan’s direction is unparalleled. The acting is absurdly heart-wrenching. And Zimmer’s score is inspired.
No idea why this movie isn’t talked about nearly as much as it should. The good side is that the lack of attention made no chance of a sequel, it’s just a gem
Many people seem to dislike it for that ONE line Dr Brand says about love. It's said only one time in the movie, and some people hate it for that. Hell, even that video talks about it in a negative way. One of the most humanist movie ever reduced to "love is transcendantal". It's just a line, take the whole movie as a message, not that 5 seconds part in the middle of the movie. This thing is a god damn masterpiece, music, actors, visuals, story, humor, heart wrenching but also so hopeful. There's everything in there in a wonderful package. EDIT : note that I find the line to be corny as well!
People who call a movie they like a "Cinematic masterpiece" really don't understand how much of an overstatement that is. This movie, is a Cinematic masterpiece. Every piece of time and emotion in this movie is perfect. It's tense, suspenseful, emotional, and brilliantly crafted like every other Nolan film. This movie is perfect.
Sadly its plot is flawed. I will concede that it is extremely interesting, that it aspired to great heights, and its DNA is inspired by 2001 but could not come close.
Interstellar is my favorite movie ever, the music, the cinematography, the message, the scale, the beauty and the science all blend together into something so amazing, Everytime I watch it I find something new to love
kewltony Because he was confused and panicked. Your talking about the scene where he sends the message “S.T.A.Y.” To his daughter? I’m sorry, there’s a lot to comprehend with this masterpiece lol. Been a minute since I’ve watched it
I absolutely love that first sequence when they are leaving Earth's atmosphere. Michael Caine reading the lines from that poem gives me chills. When you hear it and consider the stakes...the weight...the chills.
I remember seeing this movie in the theatre and was absolutely blown away. No other movie had an impact on me like this. It certainly skyrocketed (pun intended) my love for film. What a talented man CN is. I can’t wait for Tenet.
I really like this movie, especially because I’m super interested in astronomy, but the whole love theme kinda ruined it a bit for me. Like, the girl (whose name I forget) is supposed to be a really smart scientist, yet she decides she wants to go to a planet just because she loves a dude that’s there, rather than the one that scientifically seems like the better option. And then she ends up being right, which was even more annoying.
@@squidwardstesticles5914 I agree that this aspect makes me cringe when I watch the movie, but everything else is so atmospheric and impactful that I can't let it spoil my enjoyment overall (which is high).
Loved seeing this in theaters. The score in surround sound is an experience I haven't had with any other movie. The use of silence is as powerful as the use of music in this movie.
Yes! When I saw it in theaters I wanted to see it again and show it to a nerdy friend that didn't get out much cuz of back pain. I made him go and paid for his ticket and he loved it just as much as I did including the use of sound :P
YES. The small detail of silence when it is filmed from "outside in space" is incredibly powerful. And I remember the chairs trembling as the music swelled, amazing.
It's like a modern version of Homer's Odyssey. The hero sets off from his homeland and ends up spending years away from his family trying to do his duty.
@@stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369 I know. That's why greek mythology still inspires stories today. It can be easily translated to any period in human history.
I saw inception as being about ideas inside ideas and Interstellar as being about ideas outside ideas, as Interstellar is about coming to terms with our external limits and Inception is about confronting our internal limits.
when this movie first came out people gave it really low rating because they didn't fully understand the meaning of almost anything in the movie. Then someone made a video on youtube explaining the movie in detail and then everyone started making videos explaining the movie. And now this movie is seen as a master piece.
Yeah I will ask my friends if they saw it and they say they did, but didn't really get it. It's a movie that has to be watched twice or more to be comprehended
@@vVincent. He was afraid. Afraid of sleeping away the last of his life. Afraid of living on a desolate planet in complete loneliness. He volunteered for the mission, but realized too late that the cost was great, which led him to try and get off the planet however possible. He was a character that accurately portrayed the role of a bad guy. But it's difficult to hate him, once you look at things from his perspective.
My favorite director by far! Every single one of his movies slaps and have only gotten better release by release. The Dark Knight and Interstellar are some of the best movies ever made.
Agreed. Also fun fact Ludwig Göransson did an absolutely fantastic job in Tenet. I think nolan just knows good energy when picking a composer (even though Hans didn't do Tenet because he's already doing Dune, and recommended Ludwig himself)
how have you lived this long without it holy you are in for a whole new world of entertainment especially if you are a gamer too. 2 channel sucks balls.
@@guitarman0365 I'm relatively young and was wading through Reddit forums about sound bars and home theater setups for a long time trying to figure out what I wanted to do. I regret not getting in on it sooner.
I just watched this movie for the first time a couple days ago with my 5.1.2 Klipsch surround sound system, and I wasn't overly impressed with the sounds. However, it still makes most films more interesting.
Can we appreciate the great, HANS ZIMMER. He is the Beethoven of our time. The way he captures a scene, any scene, perfectly with music. This man is really one of a kind. So many movies, so many scores. Crazy man just crazy.
Cooper : CASE, get ready to match our spin with the retro thrusters. CASE : It's not possible. Cooper : No. IT’S NECESSARY. Hans Zimmer: IT SHALL BE DONE!
Little over a week ago, a cinema near me played Interstellar. Man, I ordered tickets as fast as lightning when I found out. One of my best cinema-experiences ever, especially since the cinema was only filled for 20% due to the COVID-measures
@@josehernandez879 because of coronavirus and a lack of new movies, cinnemas are playing popular older movies to get money. hurry up and look for what the cinnemas near you are playing while you can!
I can’t put it into words about how powerful this movie truly is. Like I don’t even want to say it’s the best movie of all time because I feel like it deserves even more than that. I really feel like this movie had absolutely nothing wrong with it, and it will forever have a place in my heart. I’m scared of watching it again because I know it will have such a powerful effect on me.
7:34 "to appreciate what we have.." We have Nerdstalgic... great video man.. I loved it.. loved the quality.. the message.. the effort invested in it..
Interstellar is an amazing film, and I've not seen any film quite like it. But, what really blew me away in this particuar video, was the *video* itself. The content obviously, but also the way it is presented. The font style, the just usage of the film's original score, the pitch perfect audio mixing, everything is perfect. Thanks for taking the time to make a piece of content whose presentation mirrors the greatness of the content in it, and isn't a choppy, rough, eyesore.
Damn dude! This was such an amazing video essay. Made me feel all the feels in ten minutes. Nolan truly is a master storyteller and filmmaker. He will definitely go down as one of the best. Now I gotta watch Interstellar again! I'll always remember the feeling I had after seeing that in theaters. It stayed for a whole week, I was just amazed. Keep it up!
This scene fucking destroyed me, and still does every time I re-watch it. The music and theme is so powerful, unbelievably powerful. The emotions are so damn intense.
The scariest thought to any film lover or filmmaker is that film might be dying. Most of the general population no longer recognise great filmmaking, it's often taken for granted and instead millions flock to the latest fast and furious-like spectacle and leave riveting, emotional masterpieces like 'Interstellar' for the handful willing to listen and learn from what great artists have to say.
Film will never die What nolan was doing is giving us the opportunity to experience these vast feelings and thoughts of someone else in a grandiose settings Humans has evolve to die for entertainment and experience As technology will move on Film will be able to produce for feelings to other senses.
Fun movies are still fun. The Fast and Furious franchise is fun! Its still film, somebody has a story to tell and so they tell it. That made you sound extremely pretentious
This video is incredible. The use of the score, the way you pronounce your sentences, the ticking clock throughout rather than only when it's important, the background images. Wow
@@Docteurten I know, right! I always see “underrated” about this or that film. Just came from Children of Men and it was there in the comments too. I think these people mean “I like this movie more than most”.
This has been my #1 favorite movie ever since it came out. I own it and have watched more times than I can count. You summarize so well some of my thoughts on why this movie is so good. The "gut wrenching" scene when only hours into his journey his kids are already letting go is so powerful. I love it.
This movie is such a masterpiece. It is a movie that will go down in history as one of the best in the century. All of his movies will go down in history as legendary.
I'm pretty sure the music shows the importance of time in that scene, because it starts at 60 bpm and goes up to 120 bpm (so exactly one beat per second and then two beats per second)... BUT I don't know about that "one tick per day on earth": Seven years per hour equals about 0,7 days per second if I'm correct - so at the beginning the beat is already a bit to fast for this.
@@trinktmalnent7744 I don't think the ticks are in time with the days passing but I do recall Hans Zimmer saying the total number of ticks is equivalent to the total number of days passed
This movie wouldn’t be what it is without the wonderful scores by Hans Zimmer and Nolan’s use of them in the film. Absolutely amazing. One of the few movies I’ll actually watch over again.
This movie is literally one of the greatest things i've ever watched. The part at 6:35 is the first time ever i was brought to tears by a movie. It really made you think about how it would feel to lose all of those years with your loved ones.
The sequence on the water planet was daunting, making me nearly tear the cushion off my arm rest. But the payoff and him seeing his children all grown up and his tears and their loss of hope... that broke me.
"Interstellar is somewhat a flawed masterpiece stuffed in a modern blockbuster" The most condensed yet accurate description of Interstellar I have ever heard
I love Interstellar. I've seen some reviews which seem to revel more in dragging down Nolan than in actually reviewing the movie. As a Dad who had to leave his kids this movie resonates with me unbelievably. So much in here. Brilliant movie.
00:04 I’m gonna stop you right there. I have had a dream about some random stuff I didn’t quite remember. Then I woke up. I went about my day as usual. Nothing was extraordinary about that day. It was about late afternoon, after a totally normal experience of a day, when... I woke up. For real though? I still don’t know.
He meant that in the grand scheme of things, and dreaming as in day dreaming and visualization aspect and not your actual dreams. Inception and Interstellar are both results of day dreaming. maybe I am still asleep who knows
i do love how the first third of the movie is just them introducing the characters and made us really connect to them before letting them go and getting to the spicy parts
Christopher Nolan is my favorite director and one of the best. All of his movies are so great. The way he thinks is just out of this world. No pun intended. His mind is somewhere else. He is the Kubrick of this century.
What do you want to see a video on next?
ALSO: BELIVE!!! Originally in what’s kind of a first cut of this video. I had rotoscoped out an image from the film, and it went in front of the phrase “believe in love” but in the process, In an attempt to get the framing right, I took out the “e” to see if it looked better. Long story short, I cut the roto and forgot to place the E back in and so in turn, we belive in love Lol
You are gonna ignore it but here's my comment, BoJack Horseman or It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
The masterpiece of a movie that is Fantastic Mr Fox. Scott Pilgrim vs The World could also accept that title
Like, just how after Interstellar, I always want to watch Interstellar again, I'm going to say Interstellar ;)
I want to help us with subs in spanish ! Grettings from Chile
After all that I’m gonna watch interstellar again rn for sure
One of my greatest life regrets is not watching this at the cinema
Got stoned with my best friend and watched it in IMAX, easily my best cinema experience! Sorry not trying to rub it in...lol
I haven’t gotten to watch a single Nolan film in the cinema yet 😭 this years tenet will be the first one tho 😊
@@gabemusicofficial5448 corona virus - "cute"
Hopefully one day there'll be a second run. Saw it with one of my friends and it was a fantastic experience. Movies are meant to seen in theaters, I feel.
GABE MUSIC OFFICIAL
Corona: oh i dont think so
The score gets me every time. It’s perfect
Hans Zimmer is a musical genius!
The way it builds up and slows down to set the mood is actually fucking amazing
I lost all hearing on the first run-through of Inception.
Still watched it two more times in theatres. Still great when you're deaf.
No time for caution is still 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 to this day
People argue that 2001: A Space Odyssey had a better soundtrack. I beg to differ.
Interstellar is a masterpiece made of with beautiful photography, acting, music and off course scenario. I don't want to see a sequel as lately i hear many demand. Interstellar must remain as it ended.
I swear I read "with beautiful pornography" lol
@@guilhermecorrea545 😂💀
i want more sci fi from Nolan definitely. Would love a *first contact* scenario
@@pastordonkoh7692 Close Encounters of the Nolan Kind
@@pastordonkoh7692 It's not a Nolan movie but I thoroughly enjoyed Arrival, more than I expected to. It has many of the same storytelling elements Nolan likes to use.
I'll never understand how this movie didn't win or even get indicated for best film in the oscars. This is a true masterpiece with amazing acting, directing, sound track and it even uses real cientific concepts wich makes it even better for me
Oscars are a joke anyways
@@dreamshorizon3093 Yea i agree they are a joke, it took leo dicaprio 2 decades to win his first one after countless amazing performances. He should have atleast 4 or 5 at this point.
Oscar don't deserve Nolan...
J Saint Hollywood hates Jews. They much prefer Muslims.
Which*
What a masterpiece. I've watched this movie about 20 times, everytime I watch it I STILL see stuff I didn't see the first 19 times.
Absolutely, yes
hell, i still jump (somewhat) at Mann's shuttle decompression scene, even though i know it's coming every. single. time. just experiencing that particular scene in the theater scared the shit out of me, and then the follow up scene and it's music.... just stuck with me to this day. i can't get enough of this movie and it's easily one of my favorites from Nolan.
Get your dead channel out of here
@Chris Smith I think 2001 is overated to high hell. Good movie? Yes. Masterpiece? No.
Weird its almost like... movies are subjective. Don't post a long comment about how someone's opinion is wrong. Thats just rude and unnecessary.
@Chris Smith Finally got to see "2001: A Space Odyssey" in its entirety recently. For me, it's disjointed and incomprehensible. All the while, I thought the prehistoric ape sequence was a short snippet that 'sets the tone'. But no, it actually ran for 18 minutes. And don't get me started with the final act - the bedroom, the Sentinel overlooking the main character in what is perceived to be in its final breath, and the space fetus in the end.
I’ve seen this movie over a dozen times since 2014 and never realized the ticking every 1.25 seconds to represent a day on Earth. That broke me.
You don't realise it simply. Have to do the math.
Raj Mahanta Thank God for this video then.
This Video: every ticking represent a day on earth
Hans who make the ticking 1.25 seconds just to fit in the tempo: Damn I'm genius
Nah it's more than a day on Earth because they were less than an hour there and his kids aged by 20-30 years
@@SahilP2648 Every hour on Miller (the water planet) is about 7 years on Earth. There are 3600 seconds in an hour, and (86400 x 365.25 x 7) or roughly 221,000,000 seconds in 7 years, giving us a conversion factor of 221,000,000/3600 ≈ 61400 seconds which pass on Earth for every second spent on Miller. Times this by the interval between each 'tick', and you get 77000 Earth-seconds, about 21 hours. So, each 'tick' you hear is a whole day passing on Earth.
This scene absolutely blew my mind, I noticed these little details but you explained it perfectly. Interstellar is a 10/10 to me.
How does going to space fix a blight on crops?
@@kewltony they wanted to leave earth
@@kewltony Bruh u just questioning around the comment section, *Without fucking watching the movie* !!! They wanted to find a new planet just like Earth for new colonisation as they can't make every mankind leave the earth, They needed quantum data to solve this after they find out they made 4D space stations which was orbiting the Saturn !!! I'm not going to explain all this just watch the movie OK
@@kewltony have you seen the movie
100/10 for me 🤗
Hans Zimmer really didn’t get the Oscar for this.... literally one of the best, if not the best score he’s ever done
And this fact is made all the more impressive because that dude has made the best soundtracks ever
I’m so happy ive came to see comments talking about the scores in this movie. They blow me
Don't worry man,he did get it for dune,which is also a bit sci fi but more about human nature and behaviour and minds. Zimmer Interstellar main score is the best but dune score beats everything else he has done
@@anzarm.a8547 nope
now we know its Oppenheimer
I literally can’t watch him watch his kids age again. It kills me. Every time.
This movie is probably why Scott's return in Avengers Endgame hit me so hard. To think, in the blink of an eye, you miss your child's life... I can't imagine when time is already so unforgiving as is.
Wow. You uploaded the Clayton Young video. Weird to see you here
Same. I fear watching it cuz it hits just as hard as the first time every time.
Absolutely brutal.
I watched this movie four times, cried all of them. It breaks my heart just to imagine missing 20 years of my little daughter.
Fun fact: the original version of the score was created by Zimmer before he was presented to the real concept of the movie. He was told the movie was about a child and a father.
Incredible.
A boy and a father, rather. It was important for him to build a score that had that special boy/father relationship, that Nolan didn’t think Zimmer would grasp, if he had known it was a daughter all along.
this makes me wonder if the part about the ticking clock and how each tick is a day was purely coincidental, or if zimmer composed that piece in post production.
Michael Holman the ticking clock was thought about later on. Before he knew what the movie was really about, he wrote the chords (which is the best part of the score)
@@MannexX this made me think. It made me kinda angry at first but then I realized that Cooper and his daughter have indeed a very "father-son relationship". not that a father and a daughter can't have THAT kind of relationship but I'm sure that if someone says father-daughter relationship, people wouldn't think about the one that Cooper had with her, but that is what Nolan had in mind for them and he knew that Zimmer wouldn't understand unless he thought it was a father-son relationship
Nolan is one of the most adept and gifted filmmakers, Interstellar is a cinematic masterpiece, everything from the characters to the execution of its narrative.
The soundtracks too, the soundtracks are inconceivably amazing.
True
How are you here too
I agree. I love his movies. I’m not someone who’s super loyal to any directors or producers, but I come closest with Nolan, I think. I just showed my boyfriend Inception last weekend, the first movie we watched at home together.
ur just everywhere i go
How come I see you everywhere? Are you Justin Y.'s sibling or himself?
This is one of the few movies I’ve cried at. Cooper seeing his children grow up without him hit me hard
While he was send messages back in time to himself, he could have said go into the black hole. It would have saved time, the lives of his crew, and the suffering of billions of people waiting on earth.
@@kewltony he couldnt say it,he wasnt the one saving the world, it was his daughter
Bawled like a damn baby in theaters at this movie.
Agreed. I fought it hard but I was busted by my girlfriend. She made fun of me while tears rolled down her face. The most intense scene ever for me. Maconahay was amazing. The camera work was amazing. It was heart wrenching.
the part that makes me cry is towards the end when he's trapped... I bawl every time there
The "payoff" almost made me drown myself in my own tears. Most people of the fully packed cinema (800 people) were crying. I've not experienced something so powerful in a cinema
Amazing scene he goes through 23 years worth of emotions in the space of 15 mins.
800 in a cinema????!!! Holy shit where? The majority of cinemas near me are probably 100 or so for a screen
Wow, 800 people in a single space. What life was like in the Before Times. Also yes, that scene never fails to make me cry, holy crap.
"But today's my birthday, and its a special one. Because you told me..." 😥😢😭
This Movie was Far beyond its Time.
All of Nolan's films are ahead of their time.
agreed.
Really well what did u get from the movie.. did u even understand what blight is?
so u really think going to outer space & jumping into a Black hole is a intelligent way to spent money inorder to solve the issue of blight.. !!
@@evm6177 wtf it's a just a movie man, chill
@@evm6177 they were looking for another planet
Really Interstellar is several movies inside a movie. There was the water planet, but also the dying Earth, Dr. Mann's deception, Murph's homecoming, Cooper's journey into the singularity and finally his homecoming and return to Dr Brand. Each were very much like separate short stories in side the larger story.
They tried hard to shoehorn them all in together.
that's what makes a good story - like the threads of a tapestry the different plots weave around one another to create a beautiful piece of art.
Nolan uses this trick and time dilation in most of his films
90% honesty 🥺
Just by showing the clip of cooper crying made me shed 2 tears,the amount of emotion this movie is able to create is out of this world
...quite literally in a way ☺️
same. I've often thought about what it must feel like to wake up from a coma after years, you cannot understand the time you missed, but you look around and see your family older and realize you have missed so much. I couldnt even begin to imagine the loss one would feel in that moment that felt like hours but was really 23 years, heartbreaking.
I had to remind myself that it’s only a movie...
I like how the Endurance has 12 individual capsules, just like a clock.
true. now if one is biblically inclined, its the 12 disciples, and the central explorer ship is the savior
Gizziiusa or the 12 zodiac and with the sun in the center.
Inevitably and quickly spinning clockwise descending to the planet during the docking scene, making each second vital. This rotation being like the time they are losing right now, as they need to be as quick as possible to dock, but also the time they lost forever in this mission. I always saw it this way. It's not really subtle but the docking scene is so strong that we don't need finesse at this very moment haha !
@@Gizziiusa but that's not real. Science is though and is proven.
@@Gizziiusa plus there's the Lazarus missions
Even after 6 years of this masterpiece, we are discussing the movie. That's the power of Interstellar.
Holy moly it's already been 6 years
I've heard a sequel is possible soon and it's been 50 minutes on Miller's planet since the release of interstellar.
I love that we are still discussing this movie 6 years later. This movie takes me back
The movie is garbage and you can’t even spell it properly.
@@ophello Uh, it's spelled exactly as it should be. You have a head injury recently, my guy?
Interstellar is the greatest movie of all time. Nolan’s direction is unparalleled. The acting is absurdly heart-wrenching. And Zimmer’s score is inspired.
No film can be perfect, but hell, this movie is damn close to being just that. In my opinion it's one of the best films ever made.
Favorite movie by far
100th like
Absolutely agree
Alrightalrightalright!
Unparalleled
This film is the reason why i fell in love with soundtracks and Zimmer's music.
It's the reason I got into philosophy and existentialism
Zimmer is one of the reasons I got into soundtracks/orchestral music as well
I've said it before and I'll say it again:
This movie was ahead of its time.
In a world where most people don't understand basic newtonian gravity, basing a movie around general relativity is ballsy AF
heyooooo
I see what you did there
Dude it's like couple of years old, when is the right time for it ? We only gonna get more stupid as society
@@nemanjap8768 😂😂 It's 6 years old. And yeah we seem to be moving in the direction of stupidity and banality.
No idea why this movie isn’t talked about nearly as much as it should. The good side is that the lack of attention made no chance of a sequel, it’s just a gem
Many people seem to dislike it for that ONE line Dr Brand says about love. It's said only one time in the movie, and some people hate it for that. Hell, even that video talks about it in a negative way. One of the most humanist movie ever reduced to "love is transcendantal". It's just a line, take the whole movie as a message, not that 5 seconds part in the middle of the movie.
This thing is a god damn masterpiece, music, actors, visuals, story, humor, heart wrenching but also so hopeful. There's everything in there in a wonderful package.
EDIT : note that I find the line to be corny as well!
Agathia I absolutely love this movie and it’s probably my favorite ever but damn that line is so cringey I hate it every time I watch it
It think it is talked about a lot. Its the best movie of this generatio I think. Its just perfect. Its a 10/10. Period.
@@raphaeltiziani7476 I do think it is a masterpiece but the best film?
Yeah for real it is a master piece, and it’s one of the first space movies to get physics correct
This the kind of highly developed content RUclips hates recommending. Take all the sponsors you need g
ikr I am so mad I have never seen this before. Yet terrible stuff gets recommended
Yeah well.. after that " content creator of the year" shit show and all the garbage rewinds I wouldn't wonder why am I not surprised
RUclips is better off being run and managed by lizards than those cocksuckers in power now
Sponsors and capitalism in general is the death of good content.
RUclips reccommend this to me
Interstellar was WAAAY before it's time. It's a true masterpiece and one of my all time favorite films. It's just perfect
People who call a movie they like a "Cinematic masterpiece" really don't understand how much of an overstatement that is. This movie, is a Cinematic masterpiece. Every piece of time and emotion in this movie is perfect. It's tense, suspenseful, emotional, and brilliantly crafted like every other Nolan film. This movie is perfect.
Here, take your 100 likes good sir
@@SaveTheStars I appreciate yours and the other ninety eight peoples appreciation of my opinion good sir.
Sadly its plot is flawed. I will concede that it is extremely interesting, that it aspired to great heights, and its DNA is inspired by 2001 but could not come close.
@@gs032009 what the absolute shit does that mean
@@gs032009 what
Interstellar is my favorite movie ever, the music, the cinematography, the message, the scale, the beauty and the science all blend together into something so amazing, Everytime I watch it I find something new to love
Why did cooper send messages back in time to himself but leave out all the information that would have saved the lives of his crew?
kewltony Because he was confused and panicked. Your talking about the scene where he sends the message “S.T.A.Y.” To his daughter? I’m sorry, there’s a lot to comprehend with this masterpiece lol. Been a minute since I’ve watched it
couldn't have said it better myself. a masterpiece in every sense of the word
Yup, in my top 5 of all time for the same reasons
I absolutely love that first sequence when they are leaving Earth's atmosphere. Michael Caine reading the lines from that poem gives me chills. When you hear it and consider the stakes...the weight...the chills.
Interstellar is as close to perfect as a movie can be in my opinion.
In a long time we will look back and appreciate what a masterful of a film it is.
@sont nagda Ok.
@sont nagda I respectfully disagree.
I completely agreed
How does Christopher Nolan keep doing it?
I remember seeing this movie in the theatre and was absolutely blown away. No other movie had an impact on me like this. It certainly skyrocketed (pun intended) my love for film. What a talented man CN is. I can’t wait for Tenet.
I regret it so much that I wasn't able to watch this masterpiece in cinema.
I really like this movie, especially because I’m super interested in astronomy, but the whole love theme kinda ruined it a bit for me. Like, the girl (whose name I forget) is supposed to be a really smart scientist, yet she decides she wants to go to a planet just because she loves a dude that’s there, rather than the one that scientifically seems like the better option. And then she ends up being right, which was even more annoying.
@@squidwardstesticles5914 I agree that this aspect makes me cringe when I watch the movie, but everything else is so atmospheric and impactful that I can't let it spoil my enjoyment overall (which is high).
Josiah Ferrell yeah I still really enjoy it. I’m probably gonna rewatch it soon actually, because I’ve only seen it once about a year or 2 ago
McConaughey is absolutely insane in the “Payoff” scene - what a brilliant actor
So grateful to my uncle for dragging me to the theater to see this back when it was released. Hands down my favorite memory of going to the movies.
I love how a single movie changed the definition of the word inception
Lol right? 😂
This is probably the only movie that goes double digits from the amount of times Ive watched it
Only double digits? Haha those are rookie numbers😂
Same here. Its my #1. One of only 2 movies I've seen more than once in theaters too.
@@kokujin5446 who TF watches a movie 100 times? Even the masterpiece movies get boring.
I watch it at least once a year
I dont want to see it again cuz i feel like i burn movies by watching them many times :'v
Loved seeing this in theaters. The score in surround sound is an experience I haven't had with any other movie. The use of silence is as powerful as the use of music in this movie.
Yes! When I saw it in theaters I wanted to see it again and show it to a nerdy friend that didn't get out much cuz of back pain. I made him go and paid for his ticket and he loved it just as much as I did including the use of sound :P
YES. The small detail of silence when it is filmed from "outside in space" is incredibly powerful.
And I remember the chairs trembling as the music swelled, amazing.
I regret soo much not watching this in cinemas, one of my favourite movies
Absolutely agree with you, even listening to the score now by its self elicits an emotional response
Interstellar seriously has one of the best scores of all time. The main theme sounds give me chills every single time.
Nerdstalgic: We can only go forward
Tenet: Hold my beer
It's like a modern version of Homer's Odyssey. The hero sets off from his homeland and ends up spending years away from his family trying to do his duty.
Your comment kept me thinking about how Ulises don't show any traces of getting any older as the tale progress, while his family clearly it shows.
@@gastonibarlucea Yeah. I love when they modernize old mythology like that. It's crazy how it still has some relevance even in today's world.
Humans will always have the same story
@@stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369 I know. That's why greek mythology still inspires stories today. It can be easily translated to any period in human history.
yep
Dude I would of listened to him describe the entire film from beginning to end.
would have
Me too ;)
I saw inception as being about ideas inside ideas and Interstellar as being about ideas outside ideas, as Interstellar is about coming to terms with our external limits and Inception is about confronting our internal limits.
@InSanctvs cool what?
@@jyotektosgaimur cool
@@michaelh.1262 I feel like there's something I'm missing.
Cooper watching his children grow up is my favourite movie scene of all times. It's gut wrenching and it's the only time I cried because of a movie.
when this movie first came out people gave it really low rating because they didn't fully understand the meaning of almost anything in the movie. Then someone made a video on youtube explaining the movie in detail and then everyone started making videos explaining the movie. And now this movie is seen as a master piece.
I mean 2001 was the same when it came out back in the day making what is basically a big-budget science fiction arthouse film comes with that risk.
Yeah I will ask my friends if they saw it and they say they did, but didn't really get it. It's a movie that has to be watched twice or more to be comprehended
Hans Zimmer's music in interstellar makes me cry every single time
"Because I gave it to her."
Makes me cry every time.
But they didn't choose me. They chose her!
"Dont let me leave, Murph!"
I know right! Even more if you’re into watches like I am.
This is my all time favorite movie. The acting, storyline, plot. All of it. The themes and ideas brought up or just sooo good.
Agreed! A movie with so many layers
The twist was the shit birdman dominating Oscars that year
ayoub larguet EXACTLY. And tbh it wasn’t the good. It was definitely overrated
@@markp9366 I disagree, I prefer Birdman, although Interstellar was great too.
still can't watch Mathews recap of his family, or hear the score, without crying. This is such a powerful movie in such a raw way.
Inception and interstellar are more then just movies. I love how you pointed that out using both masterpieces
Thing about Nolan, I have yet to hate any of the characters nor his movies.
what about the guy who back stabbed cooper I forgot his name
@@vVincent. He was afraid. Afraid of sleeping away the last of his life. Afraid of living on a desolate planet in complete loneliness. He volunteered for the mission, but realized too late that the cost was great, which led him to try and get off the planet however possible. He was a character that accurately portrayed the role of a bad guy. But it's difficult to hate him, once you look at things from his perspective.
vVincent dr. Mann
Even in Following (which i like) ?
My favorite director by far! Every single one of his movies slaps and have only gotten better release by release. The Dark Knight and Interstellar are some of the best movies ever made.
Christopher Nolan and Hans Zimmer
The 21st century maestros
I hate you
@@mickroyster6442 lmao
Absolutely
Agreed. Also fun fact Ludwig Göransson did an absolutely fantastic job in Tenet. I think nolan just knows good energy when picking a composer (even though Hans didn't do Tenet because he's already doing Dune, and recommended Ludwig himself)
I just got a 5.1 surround system, I'm thinking about revisiting this film.
how have you lived this long without it holy you are in for a whole new world of entertainment especially if you are a gamer too. 2 channel sucks balls.
@@guitarman0365 I'm relatively young and was wading through Reddit forums about sound bars and home theater setups for a long time trying to figure out what I wanted to do. I regret not getting in on it sooner.
I just watched this movie for the first time a couple days ago with my 5.1.2 Klipsch surround sound system, and I wasn't overly impressed with the sounds. However, it still makes most films more interesting.
I've had a surround sound for a while and just got a new TV. It was absolute heaven to watch this. I'm still mad I didn't see it in IMAX
It's been five years since I watched the movie, and it's still is one of the best movies I ever watched
Can we appreciate the great, HANS ZIMMER. He is the Beethoven of our time. The way he captures a scene, any scene, perfectly with music. This man is really one of a kind. So many movies, so many scores. Crazy man just crazy.
Cooper : CASE, get ready to match our spin with the retro thrusters.
CASE : It's not possible.
Cooper : No. IT’S NECESSARY.
Hans Zimmer: IT SHALL BE DONE!
My favorite line of the movie right there
Little over a week ago, a cinema near me played Interstellar. Man, I ordered tickets as fast as lightning when I found out.
One of my best cinema-experiences ever, especially since the cinema was only filled for 20% due to the COVID-measures
I didn’t even know they could still be played
@ALostWolf , you lucky bastard, I envy you
@@josehernandez879 because of coronavirus and a lack of new movies, cinnemas are playing popular older movies to get money. hurry up and look for what the cinnemas near you are playing while you can!
this is not a movie within a movie, this is just a bloody damn good movie
I've always heard, that this was one of those movies, where the soundtrack can only be truly experienced in a movie theater with it's surround sound
I can’t put it into words about how powerful this movie truly is. Like I don’t even want to say it’s the best movie of all time because I feel like it deserves even more than that. I really feel like this movie had absolutely nothing wrong with it, and it will forever have a place in my heart. I’m scared of watching it again because I know it will have such a powerful effect on me.
7:34 "to appreciate what we have.."
We have Nerdstalgic... great video man.. I loved it.. loved the quality.. the message.. the effort invested in it..
Appreciate that man!!
Space movies give so much anxiety watching them, but at the same time I can't stop watching.
Interstellar is an amazing film, and I've not seen any film quite like it.
But, what really blew me away in this particuar video, was the *video* itself. The content obviously, but also the way it is presented. The font style, the just usage of the film's original score, the pitch perfect audio mixing, everything is perfect. Thanks for taking the time to make a piece of content whose presentation mirrors the greatness of the content in it, and isn't a choppy, rough, eyesore.
Watching Cooper watch his family is one of the most heartbreaking scenes I've experienced.
Damn dude! This was such an amazing video essay. Made me feel all the feels in ten minutes. Nolan truly is a master storyteller and filmmaker. He will definitely go down as one of the best. Now I gotta watch Interstellar again! I'll always remember the feeling I had after seeing that in theaters. It stayed for a whole week, I was just amazed. Keep it up!
Thank you for making videos that don’t get monitized because RUclips can suck. WE REALLY APPRECIATE IT.
Your commentary on this part in the movie just made me relive that excitement. Thank you so much!! I love this movie, and I love this video
This scene fucking destroyed me, and still does every time I re-watch it. The music and theme is so powerful, unbelievably powerful. The emotions are so damn intense.
The scariest thought to any film lover or filmmaker is that film might be dying.
Most of the general population no longer recognise great filmmaking, it's often taken for granted and instead millions flock to the latest fast and furious-like spectacle and leave riveting, emotional masterpieces like 'Interstellar' for the handful willing to listen and learn from what great artists have to say.
Film will never die
What nolan was doing is giving us the opportunity to experience these vast feelings and thoughts of someone else in a grandiose settings
Humans has evolve to die for entertainment and experience
As technology will move on
Film will be able to produce for feelings to other senses.
Fun movies are still fun. The Fast and Furious franchise is fun! Its still film, somebody has a story to tell and so they tell it. That made you sound extremely pretentious
This video is incredible. The use of the score, the way you pronounce your sentences, the ticking clock throughout rather than only when it's important, the background images. Wow
he always delivers like this
Nerdstalgic: "Inception is Nolan at his most outlandish"
Tenet: Hold my beer
Beer my hold mean you
@@cougarkids4978 fantastic comment
@@cougarkids4978 reeb ym dloh naem ouY
Implying it actually comes out
Hold my biscotti
Interstellar is one of the most underrated movies in history. In fact it was not a movie it was a life changing experience.
Underrated ?
I love the movie but it felt like a diet version of 2001 to me
@@Docteurten I know, right!
I always see “underrated” about this or that film. Just came from Children of Men and it was there in the comments too.
I think these people mean “I like this movie more than most”.
This has been my #1 favorite movie ever since it came out. I own it and have watched more times than I can count. You summarize so well some of my thoughts on why this movie is so good. The "gut wrenching" scene when only hours into his journey his kids are already letting go is so powerful. I love it.
This movie is such a masterpiece. It is a movie that will go down in history as one of the best in the century. All of his movies will go down in history as legendary.
Nolan, a true artist who tells the story that needs to be told. Unique like no other
That's why he's one of my favorite directors working today. The man can twist concepts like dreams and time unlike anything we've seen before.
Wow, I hadn’t noticed the score being 1 tick per day on earth. Clever.
I'm pretty sure the music shows the importance of time in that scene, because it starts at 60 bpm and goes up to 120 bpm (so exactly one beat per second and then two beats per second)...
BUT I don't know about that "one tick per day on earth": Seven years per hour equals about 0,7 days per second if I'm correct - so at the beginning the beat is already a bit to fast for this.
@@trinktmalnent7744 I don't think the ticks are in time with the days passing but I do recall Hans Zimmer saying the total number of ticks is equivalent to the total number of days passed
@@cookiemonster59263 each tick is about 21 hours (edit: at a tick every 1.25 seconds)
You taught me more about symbology on this video, than my actual teacher of symbology in a semester.
Symbolism maybe?
The discussion around this movie are always interesting, there's so many layers that can be discussed in different contexts
This movie wouldn’t be what it is without the wonderful scores by Hans Zimmer and Nolan’s use of them in the film. Absolutely amazing. One of the few movies I’ll actually watch over again.
I still cry when I watch the part where his kids grow up and move on right before his eyes
0:57 “Belive in love”
“𝘽𝙚𝙡𝙞𝙫𝙚”
Such wise words
I noticed too...proudest achievement of my life XD
I sought out this comment for many moons.
I was far too lazy to comment this myself. Keep up the good work!
I had to pause the video to make sure someone said something.
You’re not the hero we deserve, but you’re the one we need right now.
it is a sign, love is a hoax
This movie is literally one of the greatest things i've ever watched. The part at 6:35 is the first time ever i was brought to tears by a movie. It really made you think about how it would feel to lose all of those years with your loved ones.
Fun fact: there wasn't a single green screen used in this movie
Still blows my mind...
I really don’t get how he does it, even in Tenet recently he avoided any form of CGI at all costs it’s incredible
what? but how??
@@muhammadtarunaaldiramadan248 they filmed this in space duh
How did they film the massive waves in Miller's planet?
@@renjijoo Don't underestimate the power of the cameraman
Hans Zimmer did that exact same thing with the ever-rising score in Dunkirk and I absolutely LOVE it!
The sequence on the water planet was daunting, making me nearly tear the cushion off my arm rest. But the payoff and him seeing his children all grown up and his tears and their loss of hope... that broke me.
There are two movies that make me cry: Schindler's List and Interstellar.
Boluwatife Adegbemile interstellar, Schindler’s list, and saving private Ryan are the three that made me cry
The intro of up
Wow this is basically asmr with messages
So peacful
Me: *hits blunt*
RUclips: *recommends this crazy video*
Me:
*”whoah”*
Smoking a joint and reading your comment made me giggle as I am experiencing the same😂
@@esgaldir7315 yo I’m smokin up with my boys right now 😂😂
I cannot describe in words my love for this entire movie. The story, the science, the score, the shots. Every single part of it is perfect to me
Nerdstalgic makes the best video essays on RUclips.
Change my mind.
"Interstellar is somewhat a flawed masterpiece stuffed in a modern blockbuster"
The most condensed yet accurate description of Interstellar I have ever heard
I prefer "overrated"
2:10 “Or better yet” is that really the best choice of words
It doesn't have to be a negative thing, for example he might mean "a better reason yet to complete this mission quickly."
I knew there was a clock ticking in the soundtrack, but that 1.25 seconds=1 day detail was just 😙👌
I love Interstellar. I've seen some reviews which seem to revel more in dragging down Nolan than in actually reviewing the movie.
As a Dad who had to leave his kids this movie resonates with me unbelievably. So much in here. Brilliant movie.
Interstellar is the 2001 of this generation.
I mean, it definitely strives to be.
I guess alien was the 2001 of the last generation
2001 was a hippy film.
Avatar is 2001 of this generation
@@NMSSDFT nah
00:04 I’m gonna stop you right there.
I have had a dream about some random stuff I didn’t quite remember. Then I woke up. I went about my day as usual. Nothing was extraordinary about that day. It was about late afternoon, after a totally normal experience of a day, when...
I woke up. For real though? I still don’t know.
He meant that in the grand scheme of things, and dreaming as in day dreaming and visualization aspect and not your actual dreams. Inception and Interstellar are both results of day dreaming. maybe I am still asleep who knows
i do love how the first third of the movie is just them introducing the characters and made us really connect to them before letting them go and getting to the spicy parts
I can't describe how much I love the wave scene. When the camera just goes up and then the soundtrack drops. Truly beautiful
This is one of the best video essays that I have or will ever see in my entire life.
Interstellar had me balling for days and with a deeper appreciation for family
Interstellar is one of my absolute favorite sci-fi movies and my favorite movie of 2014
No matter how many times I watch this movie, when the scene of cooper watching his kids messages plays, I cry.
“Nolan at his most outlandish”
my friend
have you seen tenet
Christopher Nolan is my favorite director and one of the best. All of his movies are so great. The way he thinks is just out of this world. No pun intended. His mind is somewhere else. He is the Kubrick of this century.