No One Prepared Me for This!!! || First Time Watching || Interstellar (2014) Movie Reaction
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
- ** Had to reupload this video with a slightly heavier filter because it got blocked 2 hours after posting yesterday. **
LINK TO WATCH WITHOUT FILTER : www.dropbox.co...
Join me on Patreon to watch the full length reaction + full commentary after : / evev ♡
after 8 years, this movie is getting back to gaining the status it deserves.
i'm also not ashamed to admit this, but the movie has had a 100% success rate at making me cry
Same. "Because my dad promied me" ALWAYS atleast makes me tear up in every reaction
Yupp. The moment he enters the room and sees her on the bed breaks me every single time.
istgggggg man, i search up reactions to this movie every week, rlly wanna watch this and cry w someonee
I am so glad i experienced this in theaters that too in imax it was magnificent, Same was true for tenet so many people just simply didn't understand it. Let TEN years pass then they will realise.
If you don't cry watching this you don't have a heart.
Young Murph’s 1st line in the movie: “DAD! I thought you were the ghost!”
Because my dad promisse me always get me in tears
Same, i can see this scene 100000 times, i'll cry every single time
@@the_micks At this point, my tears start welling up in anticipation of that statement when he asks her, instead of upon the answer itself.
Me too 😢😭
@@charlie7mason ME TOO 💔
It's my turn to say this on the next reaction!
One of the most emotional movies i've ever seen and the soundtrack's just perfection
I watched this in IMAX w/ my daughter. She thought Edmund had died, I told her if you really think about it, he didnt sleep his life away. He lived and died of old age since this is roughly 80 years after his original departure when "observing his linear time clock." He chose to live life instead of Dr Mann's decision to literally box himself into a coffin.
True, but his planet was a bit more conducive to that ;)
Yeah, I was about to say ...Edmund had completely different options in front of him compared to Mann. The two scenarios are hardly comparable.
However, Edmund died at a relatively young age, not old age (safely assuming Edmund and Brand were close to the same age since they were romantically involved BEFORE the Lazarus Missions ever left Earth.)
Remember, Edmund stopped sending data _long_ before the team ever even went to Miller's planet for that 23 year time slippage and therefore also before the slingshot around Gargantua and that little maneuver's 60 year slip. (We are left to assume as to why that data transmission ceased, but it's most likely Edmund's death or equipment malfunction ...or death due to equipment malfunction).
I mean in Edmund's situation (solo explorer, alien world, likely not a doctor, no access to hospital, etc) something like a ruptured appendix or broken leg could easily mean the end of his run. Life is actually extremely fragile and fleeting. Some of us are just privileged enough and/or technologically advanced enough to have the luxury of forgetting that fact.
Now by the time Brand _arrived_ on Edmund's planet it had been 80+ years of radio silence from Edmund. Brand would have found a corpse that had been decomposing for 80+ years (or decomposing for less time in the case Edmund lived another 20-40 years but was unable to transmit data due to equipment failure) ... Likewise, it's entirely plausible that the tombstone/grave that Brand built for Edmund was just a memorial with no actual body to bury.
I do like to think Edmund died on his feet, though. I like to think he tried to set up base camp and grow food in a garden etc. before eventually "running out of time". I like to think Edmund worked tirelessly for the future where he believed he would reunite with Brand and jump-start the human race again. This movie is a great reminder that even our best laid plans often fail or succeed due to forces outside our control, but that's never a reason not to try.
@@_FirstLast_ He died because of some rock slippage.
Hans zimmer's soundtrack for interstellar is what i've most listened for the past 3 years almost everyday literally for any situation: sleeping, studying, taking a bath... It's an angelical composition that I might listen for the rest of my life... Everyone should check the orchestra live of Interstellar's soundtrack
Yes me too ❤️
"The Parfume"- Sountrack should fit then also...
@@Alias-Steff I'll look for that
@@rodrigofoli ruclips.net/video/pA-04MCQb0k/видео.html
I love the soundtrack, but it’s one of those precious soundtracks that I don’t want to get bored of. So I only enjoy the soundtrack whilst watching the movie. This film would not be as good without the music and vice versa. This is one of those films which has complete symbiosis between picture, sound and story
"because my dad promised me" absolutely murdered me. i was sobbing everywhere
This movie surprised me how deep it was and well written. It's great when I get a big movie experience I don't expect, I hope you enjoyed it too!
@Galford_78 yes love em all and his Brother is a great writer to go with Christopher's directing.
Watched this movie many times, never realized at the end she isn’t wearing her helmet. I love that so much, showing breathable air
This is my favorite movie of all time, not just because I am huge space exploration and astronomy nerd, but also because it's just such a fucking great film. That docking scene is a part of movie history. Fun fact, all 3 planets they visited were filmed in my country, Iceland.
17:10 fun fact that clock you hear is exactly 1.25 seconds apart and that represents one day passing back on earth
I saw this in IMAX and holy cow was it a top tier cinematic experience. The visuals, story, sound design, OST, acting, all of it was top notch. Never fail to move me to tears and I love seeing people experience it too.
21:01 you are actually the first content creator that notices that Jessie the baby died because every other movie reactor never commented or noticed that the baby Jessie died and for me it actually took me multiple watches to notice that they mentioned in that scene that Jessie died
My brother’s name is Jesse so it stuck with me that it was the little baby’s name, poor little guy😣
Another channel released a reaction to this movie a couple days ago and they noticed that too.
It took me a few times, too.
that was the one detail that made the messages so much more impactful, so much missed
Yes, I've seen every single Interstellar reaction too and she is dfeinitely the first to notice it. In fact, I never noticed it and I've watched the movie 10 times.
Man this is the greatest movie of all time seriously opened my mind to so much about reality and the world we know. Nolan’s storytelling is one of the best to exist.
This movie tricks people into thinking that it is another sci-fi pew-pew movie until the feels arrive
Fantastic reaction to this masterpiece of a movie. Seen it 20+ times by now but I still cry my eyes out at the 23 years of messages scene and the "because my dad promised me" at the end lol, it's just so well acted. Please do more movie reactions! Great content so far, continue comme ça 👍👍
It's rare that science fiction and emotional writing come together. Very well done
I'm always introducing this film to people. I love to see people's reactions to film.
The green mile is another great film I show.
"Is this f'n Matt Damon?!". That was all of us in the theater too! : )
Great reaction and thank you for the link to the unfiltered version. Much appreciated!
26:52 another fun fact so Interstellar is actually 95% scientifically accurate except for this part mainly because the director of this film made a contract with a scientist I don't exactly remember his name but the scientist told him that he will immediately quit if he doesn't make it as scientifically as possible and Mann's planet is the only planet that is not scientifically accurate basically the only planet where it was full of creativity and not scientifically accurate
Btw even the docking while spinning is scientifically possible
You may be thinking of Prof Kip Thorne, a producer on Interstellar.
@@GrouchyMarx yes exactly that's him I forgot his name
Was the one hour/seven years an enormous exaggeration, or could that theoretically happen?
They agreed 90%…
@@raezor82 That can happen, the closer you get to a black hole, the slower time passes for you and the quicker it does for those who are further away
Super appreciate the link in the description to a version without the filter! I haven't come across someone else who's done that before so it was a wonderful surprise.
I've got this youtube version version playing on mute in the background so you still get the view. Cheers so much
Great reaction, seeing this in imax is still the best theater experience I’ve ever had, it was absolutely incredible. Just an awesome movie, great cast and directing, amazing soundtrack, great cinematography, this movie has it all.
For another good scifi along this line do "Contact" (1997) based on a scifi story written by Dr Carl Sagan known for his Cosmos science series on TV in the 80-90s. Contact also stars Matthew McConaughey but Jodie Foster plays the lead role. There's another tie between the two movies in that one of the Interstellar producers is Prof Kip Thorne astrophysicist of Caltech, was also a friend of Sagan and was consulted by him to keep the science in his novel "Contact" as updated and accurate as possible, as with Interstellar. 🖖😎
Damon was purposely left out of all the promotional materials, trailers & junkets & such, so him popping out of the sleep bag was a surprise to everyone.
This movie actually also contributed to science so basically in the black hole scene they asked scientists and computer experts to make a black whole so the scientist and physicists made an equation to input into the computer and thats when they got the black hole and also the best part is that they made the first computer image of a black hole even before the first picture of a black hole so they technically were so scientifically accurate that they made the first computer black hole even before we knew what a black hole looked like
I'm 54, and grew up when astronomers were fairly sure black holes existed on theoretical grounds, and we even had some astronomical photographs showing binary stars with unseen companions, which pretty much had to be black holes. But the last 20 years have seen enormous advances in astronomy, including the LIGO experiment, which can "hear" black holes and/or neutron stars swallowing each other by detecting not light, but gravity waves. It's an enormously exciting time to be alive, scientifically.
this is one of those movies that will always bring a tear to my eye. that's why I don't really watch it super often. but it has to be one of the greats doesn't it? it always brings that emotional response from me.
Thank you including the Dropbox link! Everyone liked that!
Thank you for offering the Dropbox link. I loved watching along without the filter!
I always imagined Cooper finally making it back to Brandt on that planet and after some time hearing the voice of his father giving sage advice "start doing your part young man to repopulate the Earth" while shedding an ever so loving tear at that distant memory.😢
The First time I see this movie make feel very lucky to have my loved ones close and healthy, its a beautiful movie
Thank You for the "without filter" option. I will leave this on YT playing on mute, so it counts as watched, just to support a bit, idk if it helps but I appreciate the alternative link.
The concept of Love being the bridge between galaxies seems to be a callback to Wargames when Ally Sheedy is asked in Biology class why nitrogen nodules cling to the roots of plants.
Her answer...Love.
Bridge was one of the card games on Joshua's Games list.
Good one.
@@AlanCanon2222 ya want good??
Return of the Living Dead is actually about a concentration camp
@@versetripn6631 I like that one, it's set in (but was not filmed in) my home city of Louisville.
@@AlanCanon2222 yeah...I own it and saw in the theater in '85.
Many DEEP messages in that one
@@versetripn6631 Again, Return of the Living Dead's only Louisville reference is a throwaway line, but that doesn't stop us from claiming it, does it? At our old Vogue Theater in St Matthews (Ned "Otis" from Superman Beatty's stamping ground if you must know) we would show Return of the Living Dead. When the Colonel says, "Yes, they're in Louisville. Louisville Kentucky." we would all cheer, and when they show the model (non Louisville) city just before the nuke goes off, someone would holler, "I can see my house!" Then the bomb goes off, and we'd all shout, "BUMMER!!!" Again, no part of the film was shot here, but we all loved that our medium sized town got a shout out in that good Dan O'Bannon movie. Why wouldn't we?
This is one of my favorite movies, and the soundtrack from Hans Zimmer it's amaizing! You should definitely watch more Christopher Nolan movies, he always works with Zimmer and bouth the movie and the soundtrack are always epic! I recommend you watch Inception and The Dark Knight Trilogy
I love how accurate most of the physics is in this movie, or at least as accurate as they can be when branching into the realm of theoretical physics and black holes (my true love in life). TBH I don't fault sci-fi movies for going out into the realm of fantasy, but I appreciate that you can see the writers made every attempt to keep the science at least plausible.
So many parts of this move get me choked up. Plus with the music…it’s so good and one of my favorite movies. Watch it again and you’ll pick up on a ton more. Then you’ll watch it again, and start seeing all of the layers to it.
Amazing!
I love all the Interstellar reactions, such a good movie. (also you are a legend for dropboxing the unfiltered version, Evie, thanks)
Why was it filtered in the first place?
Weird how none of these people have watched interstellar when it was one of the biggest IMAX experiences at that time and with Nolan and Hans Zimmer on it.
@@seancrowe3353 The short answer is RUclips
@@jcon2060 Even if it wasn't IMAX it was a seminal production. It's like saying you've never seen Ghostbusters.
Christopher Nolan has a thing for Field of Dreams.
Hence...Inception.
The future station where Coop's new/old house is located...has a giant round light which I'll bet Nolan added to callback the cornfield night light that Ray and his Dad played catch under.
Since the movie Interstellar came out, it's only been 1 hour 9 minutes and 5 seconds on Miller's Planet...
17:18 Every tick of that clock in the soundtrack represented a _whole day_ passing on Earth! That’s relativity for you.
Out of all the reactions that I've seen you have been the best at picking up stuff and actually understanding what's going on
The first time I seen this movie in the movie theater I cried and it instantly because my favorite movie of ALL TIME and still remains true till this day. Along with the movie “saving private Ryan” and “Schindler’s list”
Nothing more authentic than the silent reaction. Some try to over-do the reactions but I loved this one. Great job
Definatly in the top 5 of my all time favorites. Lotr, interstellar, Star wars, arrival, Inception. These are the creme de la creme for me.
Fantastic reaction, as usual Evie!
fyi, from wiki: ""Do not go gentle into that good night" is a poem in the form of a villanelle by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (1914-1953), and is one of his best-known works.[1] Though first published in the journal Botteghe Oscure in 1951,[2] the poem was written in 1947 while Thomas visited Florence with his family. Subsequent publication, along with other Thomas works, include In Country Sleep, and Other Poems (New Directions, 1952)[1] and Collected Poems, 1934-1952 (Dent, 1952).[3]
It has been suggested that the poem was written for Thomas's dying father, although he did not die until just before Christmas in 1952.[4][5] It has no title other than its first line, "Do not go gentle into that good night", a line that appears as a refrain throughout the poem along with its other refrain, "Rage, rage against the dying of the light"."
I don’t know if someone commented this yet but on millers planet you noticed the clock, each ticking noise you heard was a day back on earth!! 1.2 secs = 1 day on earth
should watch Arrival if you haven't seen it
You said that clock at 17:10 ... That is actually an amazing little info that nobody cannot understand.. You heard that clock beat sound right.. You know what it means? Every beat means one day on earth pass.. Amazing little touch from Hans Ziemmer..
i would like to highly recommend the film called *The Void* from 2017.
"...the happiest I've ever been washing dishes..." 😅💗
When i saw Matt damon i couldn't retained myself to think about "team america" and the matt Damon joke, he is a great actor, but Trey Parker and Matt Stone have broken my mind.
Nonetheless it was a magical movie.
Love you reaction. It is a great movie and a great concept a lot of this movie is fact and the creative liberties are actually unproven theories. Looking forward to more reactions and watching your channel grow.
I was just thinking about how there’s a theory that the universe is a hologram, so even the most outlandish thing they could’ve come up with would potentially be less bizarre than reality.
FYI: The Death Bed Scene with Michael Kane (Professor Brand) and Jessica Chastain (Murph) Professor Brand last words where 'Do....Not...Go...' is the opening lines of a Poem Called 'Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night' by Dylan Thomas......By the way, great reaction to the movie.
Fun fact. The clock ticking sound when they were down on the water planet happened every 1.25 seconds. Each tick you hear is a whole day passing on Earth
Passengers, with Chris Pratt & Jennifer Lawrence is a good movie also! Loved this movie!
Great reaction to an absolutely amazing film
And the music is phenomenal!
If my math is correct… it’s been 1hr and 10mins on Miller’s Planet since the release of the movie in 2014
When you said I'm learning so much 😭😭❤️
Evie! See this film in the theater!
BREAKING NEWS: The science fiction epic Interstellar, directed by Christopher Nolan, will be re-released in cinemas to commemorate its tenth anniversary. Paramount Pictures revealed this at its CinemaCon presentation in Las Vegas on April 12.
It will be available for viewing on digital screens in addition to 70MM IMAX prints, which are director Christopher Nolan’s preferred format. The movie, co-produced by Warner Bros., will be released on September 27, 2024.
"So that's going to be, like, the happiest I've ever been...washing dishes." 😝
Do you hear the ticking sound at 17:05? I don't know what the purpose of this is - maybe there is a documentary about it by the film makers - but it sounds like it ticks every ~1.3 seconds. I made some calculations and it fits really good to my assumption that every tick represents one day on Earth passing (for every 1.3 seconds of the tick duration there would be 0.922638 days passing on Earth).
They were explained! Each tick represents a day on Earth.
First reactor I've seen that clocked that jesse had died.
People often miss that Jesse died. That might be the saddest thing in this film.
The initial part of the film takes place in the 2070's, after a world war over food due to the crop blight. Due to all the root systems dying, this triggers a dust bowl, just like what happened in the 1930's when the prairie grasses were torn up to make way for farmland. After several years of fighting everyone realised they were wasting energy and resources because they were all going to starve if they didn't focus on adapting to the new world situation.
That clock you hear ticking on Miller's planet in the background is indicative of the time differential. Every 1.25 seconds it ticks, marking one day on Earth :P
The construct inside the singularity is called a tesseract, or a hypercube; a 4th dimensional construct that essentially takes a slice of 3-dimensional space at a certain point in time and allows one to interact with each moment physically. That's how the future humans allowed Coop to relay the data from inside Gargantua so that they could save the species.
The ships at the end are called O'Neill cylinders, and are one of the very few ways we know of to build viable interstellar spacecraft. The main habitat is built on the inside surface, and the whole thing is rotated at a velocity sufficient to simulate 1g via centrifugal force. The ends house the acceleration and deceleration engines (or just one end if you want to flip the ship and use one engine for both), while the central axis would be used for crew/materials transfer to the surface (an airlock would be located in the middle of one of the ends, and the axis would have effectively zero g, so you could build a central axial command system and connect it to the inner surface with an elevator). These would have to be generational ships, until we manage to find some way to crack lightspeed :P
Love. It's one of my newest favorite space movies and the music is soo mmmm... This is the first reactions of yours I've seen. I'll to see what else is on your channel.
Love Hans Zimmer music. He also did Arrival and Bladerunner 2049! He took over movie composing from a guy named Vangelis, who recently passed. Ironically, Vangelis did the music for the original Bladerunner! 😮😮
The Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence movie you were thinking of is called Passengers. I haven't seen it but it comes up on my Amazon movie searches all the time.
When there on the water planet, every tic you hear is 24 hours on Earth. Every 1.25 seconds.
Fun fact. No actor used GreenScreen on this film. The score for this film is underrated
I’m so happy when I find a new reactor reacting to this movie so that I can react to the reactor that is reacting to this movie!
Interstellar ❤ Nolan's greatest work for humanity ❤️
The original script ending was actually not hopeful & totally happy it was written by Jonathan Nolan Chris' little brother (who also co wrote & directed the epic Westworld & now the peripheral with his wife) Christopher changed the ending just to have a happy ending.
the musical score in this movie is amazing...
On the water planet. The ticking sound was every 1.25 seconds. Each tick was one day back on earth 🌎
@33:42, one the best moments in Hollywood movie history!! Followed by one of the best demonstrations of physics ever!
hands down one of my top 5 movies of all time. loved your reaction. I can watch it anytime its on tv no mater what
A lot of people call Dr. Mann the 'antagonist', but I don't see that to be the case. Rather, I see a different set of motivations that quickly spun out of control. While it's easy for the movie to paint him the antagonist given he stands against Cooper, he's actually--even if cowardly on some level--a layered character that's trying to complete the mission Dr. Brand started, 'Plan B'. One could argue that it's wrong to have faked the data to be rescued, to which I'd agree, even if it's understandable how grim the outlook is when you're destined to die alone on a distant world in your cryosleep chamber. Mann threw a hailmary, disabling KIPP and using him to power the cryosleep pod to set 'no waking date'. Imagine facing an existential crisis like that and whether you'd truly sacrifice yourself; it's like Mann said, "When I left Earth I thought I was prepared to die. But I just never faced the possibility that my planet wouldn't be the one." Mann doesn't even spin out of control until two outside factors happen: 1) Plan A is discovered to be a sham, prompting Cooper to want to take the Endurance back to Earth, and 2) Romilly explodes and Cooper calls out for Brand to notify her of Mann's betrayal. All Mann wanted, in all of his arguments, was to proceed with 'Plan B' and start a new colony on one of the new worlds. Cooper, as far as Mann knew, was threatening the survival of the human race by wanting to take the Endurance home--which was needed to travel to the new planet. If you remember, he believed Plan A was impossible, too. His plan was to get rid of the obstacles--Cooper--and blame his death on a tragedy, taking the rest of the crew to continue the mission.
It's not until the explosion and Cooper's survival that he panics and attempts to maroon them on the planet by taking off with the Endurance solo. At that point, Mann knows the jig is up and that he won't be trusted by the crew, meaning they won't go along with establishing the new colony. From his point-of-view, mankind is doomed unless he can secure the Endurance. The morality of it rests on the viewer. If you look at what he knows--and not what the Endurance crew or the audience knows--Mann's actions, though deemed selfish and cowardly, make total sense given the impending end of the human race.
I will say, however, that where a lot of people see his speeches as "self-serving", I see them as his attempt to be comforting in a situation where he feels he has no other choice. The mission--human survival--comes first. If Cooper is a threat to that, Cooper has to go. It's that 'lack of connection' premise the original 12 were sent out on that allows Mann to stay focused on the mission, despite the concerns of the morality of his actions. His actions are also not fully altruistic, given that he faked the data to be rescued and to survive in the first place, but I also believe it wasn't sheer cowardice on his part to leave the crew behind given the information available to him, which is the context in which he should be judged on.
What is her accent? It is so gentle and SO cute
Every tick you hear when they are on miller is a day passed on earth.
Me and my dad watched this movie this morning and it was crazy. I remember the first time I watched the movie and I found out who was pushing morphs books. Literally the best plot twist ever
Great reaction vid, You should check out some of Christopher Nolan's other movies incase you haven't such as: "The Prestige" , "Inception" , "The Dark Knight Trilogy". He has other films under his belt but I personally have not seen them... Yet.
Lol haha! Hi Evie, You know at every point of this story in this movie I had the exact same reactions to all yours too! Haha like Matt Damon talking to Cooper when’s he’s about to kill him. Like damn I don’t wana hear you, stfu. I’m about to die I don’t wana hear your voice! Haha great reactions. Subbed!
"Interstellar" and "Memento" are his best films, 3rd best is "Prestige"
Great reaction! I can’t keep a dry eye during this movie. It was fantastic. I could watch it 100 times. Subscribed. Has anyone ever told you that you kind of look like Christina Applegate?
Great reaction. One of my favorite movies.
It's definitely debatable but, I consider this the best movie I've seen to date. Great reaction btw, new subscriber
The movie was already long, but I would've liked to see Brand's reaction when he showed up on her planet.
Great movie , super soundtrack by Hans Zimmer !
Next movie reaction should be "Arrival (2016)"
I am so glad I got to watch this in a movie theater
Great reaction! Definitely a rollercoaster of a ride. It was an awesome and quick 3hrs! Watched it over and over after my very first time.
Another great McConaughey film underrated is "Dallas Buyers Club"(based on a true story)
Just in case you didn't know, the ticks on the water planet are the passing of days on the earth.
i can suggest prestige from the same director if you didn't watch it was a good movie
You're one of the only two people who got the bit where Tom reveals baby Jesse died. I missed this when I first watched it. I don't know why Nolan revealed it so subtlety. Not sure if it was intended or not but loads of people seem to miss it. Maybe people miss it because they are already too shocked by finding out the Grandpa died. Really tragic scene - It's bad enough finding out the Grandpa died but to find Coopers first grandson died too after only just seeing him a couple of seconds earlier for the first time is absolutely devastating.
The music in that 23 years scene is amazing. Very simple but man it's emotional. Can't think of a better piece of music that evokes such a profound sense of loss and isolation.
People also didn't get TARS when he said, "See you on the other side, Coop." right before detaching. Cooper replied, "See you there, slick!" Amelia didn't get it and neither did we.
@@Stogie2112 The only person I have seen question it is George from Cinebinge. But I think it's reasonable to not think much of it. To me the phrase "see you on the other side" is sometimes used just as a throw away comment about the afterlife i.e. we all going to die at some point so see you again whenever that is. Sometimes it's used when doing something mildy dangerous as a joke.
@@nitelite78 .... I totally agree. It was a really sly piece of writing by Nolan. What we all thought was just an often-used figurative expression was actually a literal expression. Very well done.
Amazing react! This movie is brilliant and sublime!
Now you need to watch "Arrival"..
Easy the best sci-fi movie ever made. Timeless
Could listen to you all day ..... instant fan! Thanks!
I'll do the dishes so you can make more reaction videos.
Emotion.. finally.
Btw, I hate washing dishes but I'm feeling better after Interstellar so, might be the happiest I've been washing dishes as well lol