The Cinematic Feeling of Interstellar

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • Thanks to Bespoke Post for sponsoring this video! New subscribers get 20% off their first box of awesome - go to bespokepost.com/storystreet20 and enter code STORYSTREET20 at checkout.
    Please make sure to share, like, comment, and subscribe if you want to see me ramble about other things.
    SUPPORT MY PATREON: / storystreet
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    Video Chapters:
    Play it from the Beginning - 00:00
    Sponsor - 02:57
    The Why of the Thing - 04:13
    The Stuff of Life - 21:22
    That Monstrous Lie - 37:53
    Over the Horizon - 57:40
    Murphy's Law - 01:10:06
    Credits - 01:15:16
    Footage Used From:
    Interstellar
    1917
    Boyhood
    Mission Impossible: Fallout
    Before Midnight
    Everything Everywhere All At Once
    Kung Fu Panda 2
    The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring
    Superman (1978)
    Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope
    Looper
    The Batman
    Let Me In
    Logan
    TENET
    The Prestige
    Inception
    Dunkirk
    Memento
    The Dark Knight
    Sources Used:
    Engineering is not Science - www.bu.edu/eng/about-eng/meet...
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Комментарии • 470

  • @StoryStreet
    @StoryStreet  9 месяцев назад +22

    New Bespoke Post subscribers get 20% off their first box of awesome - go to bespokepost.com/storystreet20 and enter code STORYSTREET20 at checkout. Thanks to Bespoke Post for sponsoring!
    PATREON: www.patreon.com/storystreet
    INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/storystreets/
    Engagement Question: What's your favorite Christopher Nolan movie? I think it's pretty obvious mine is Interstellar, but Oppenheimer definitely gave it some competition.
    And as always, thank you so much for watching! I hope it meant something to you.

    • @donaldzylalaj1570
      @donaldzylalaj1570 9 месяцев назад

      P9

    • @salmonofknowledge3229
      @salmonofknowledge3229 6 месяцев назад

      The Prestige. The problem is, interstellar is better on rewatches for me, but nothing can rival that one moment in the prestige where you get it for the first time. I felt amazing when I realized. I was amazed.

  • @pastlife960
    @pastlife960 9 месяцев назад +1332

    What’s even more tragic about their time on the wave planet is that even if Brandt managed to get the data from the last expedition it would have been worthless. Because of the powerful time dilation, Miller and her ship had only been on the planet for a few minutes by the time the Ranger arrives, not long enough to collect any usable data. In fact, the swell that they see moving away from them is probably the one that killed her.

    • @Priyovizion
      @Priyovizion 9 месяцев назад +90

      bloody hell man

    • @Elizacoco
      @Elizacoco 9 месяцев назад +106

      I always figured what does it matter anyway you already know you can’t live on that planet with the waves. I don’t need data to tell me that.

    • @ItsMoorbinTime
      @ItsMoorbinTime 9 месяцев назад +55

      ​@@ElizacocoI suppose it's easy for us to say that when we're not in that situation. In the moment the stress would get to you and you'd just focus on getting the data.

    • @EL-ISS
      @EL-ISS 9 месяцев назад +45

      ​​@@ElizacocoWe can only say that because hindsight is 20/20 Miller had no idea that it was a super massive wave ... she probably thought it was mountains just as the ones after her did and by the time she realised the danger it was, too, late and she was wiped out.
      She got excited that there was water, and thought that the planet was a viable candidate for humanity.
      Remember the main crew only barely made it out by the skin of their teeth and lost one of their own during the wave.

    • @blue_ig1
      @blue_ig1 9 месяцев назад +15

      But she confidently takes of her helmet and takes a breath, implying that they have found a planet with breathable air

  • @erikcarrillo7378
    @erikcarrillo7378 9 месяцев назад +762

    I feel so so bad for Romley. He waited alone for so long and when they finally returned to the ship he seemed to just want a hug or something but it seemed like everyone forgot he made one of the most selfless sacrifices.

    • @sern1225
      @sern1225 9 месяцев назад +54

      knowint about this, his death fkin destroyed me

    • @AnilKumar-xl2te
      @AnilKumar-xl2te 8 месяцев назад +16

      Nolan wanted to end those characters...they are just supporting characters....
      Main characters
      Father Cooper/Daughter Cooper
      Father Brand/Daughter Brand

    • @meatisomalley
      @meatisomalley 7 месяцев назад +39

      Romley deserved more than what he got. Man was an absolute unit.

    • @eenayeah
      @eenayeah 7 месяцев назад +5

      Why would it be a sacrifice if it was involuntary? He didn't really choose to be alone for 20+ years, didn't he (as evidenced by his surprise when they come back)? And if you count him not commiting sui as sacrificing, not killing oneself is a sacrifice, then is everyone alive right now just sacrificing themselves?

    • @erikcarrillo7378
      @erikcarrillo7378 7 месяцев назад +11

      @eenayeah He volunteered to stay behind knowing what could've happened. Why are you so angry?

  • @bionicleone
    @bionicleone 8 месяцев назад +386

    Interstellar is the only movie that I’ve ever watched that I thought “I wish I could completely forget this movie just so that I could watch it for the first time again.” Just to experience what I did the first time. I watched it out of curiosity on Netflix when it was new on there and I so wish I could have seen it in theaters.

    • @salmonofknowledge3229
      @salmonofknowledge3229 6 месяцев назад +4

      I feel that way about the prestige. I wish I could have the experience of getting it for the first time again

    • @ITSNICKMELLO
      @ITSNICKMELLO 6 месяцев назад +3

      This is my sentiment with every single Christopher Nolan film. Every watch is amazing, but the first is always beguiling and full of wonder.

    • @HundoBundo
      @HundoBundo 5 месяцев назад

      I had the privilege of feeling like experiencing the movie Arrival for the first time 2 times. The first time I saw it was when it released in 2017, and again a few months ago. Only a 5-6 year difference and I had completely forgotten what it felt like to experience the movie when I watched it the first time.

    • @josiah3820
      @josiah3820 4 месяца назад +1

      Me too. In my opinion thou I like Tenet alot, this is Nolan's masterpiece.

    • @anonymous891
      @anonymous891 2 месяца назад +1

      same here another movie is arrival for me.

  • @phoenix3589
    @phoenix3589 8 месяцев назад +312

    "because my dad promised me" has been the one single scene in all of media that consistently makes me cry

    • @Frankje01
      @Frankje01 7 месяцев назад +15

      it's amazing how a line can make your eyes roll right out of your skull if done wrong and make you cry like a new born baby when it is done right.

    • @ericmartinez1665
      @ericmartinez1665 7 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @jasonberg7644
      @jasonberg7644 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Frankje01 Right?! I can't help but cringe when I hear that line. But I guess I'm glad some people enjoy it.

    • @frog2538
      @frog2538 5 месяцев назад

      @@jasonberg7644when you're a daughter or a father you understand instantly

    • @wesleyleach2793
      @wesleyleach2793 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@jasonberg7644do you have a dad?

  • @OscarGT25
    @OscarGT25 9 месяцев назад +631

    I wish this movie was rereleased on theaters again. I believe I saw it twice when it did. It's a unique experience that can't be replicated at home.

    • @janellelives5158
      @janellelives5158 9 месяцев назад +28

      I saw it in theaters when I was in middle school. It left quite the impression on me. Pretty much it has somewhat influenced the major I’m currently pursuing 😅.
      Definitely one of my favorite films.

    • @geekygecko1849
      @geekygecko1849 9 месяцев назад +7

      I actually just saw it in theaters a month ago at the Alamo Drafthouse

    • @tonybambino1445
      @tonybambino1445 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@janellelives5158same, became a mechanical engineer and a numerous amount of my peers reference interstellar as their favorite movie

    • @savory_bacon
      @savory_bacon 9 месяцев назад

      @@geekygecko1849 yep in my city it was rereleased for a classic movies showing about a month ago. i was so happy to get to see it on the big screen again! :)

    • @youtubeaddict9393
      @youtubeaddict9393 9 месяцев назад +13

      I watched it for the first time on my PC with noise canceling headphones
      When the turned on at the end I let the entire credits play, reclined my chair, turned up the volume and just sat there. Listened. And cried.

  • @Felicity_D._Shroom
    @Felicity_D._Shroom 9 месяцев назад +285

    This video made me think of how Hans Zimmer was told to write the score for this movie. Nolan didn’t initially give him a synopsis or breakdown of the plot. Instead he described to him the emotional turmoil of the relationship between a father and daughter as depicted in the story and had Zimmer take inspiration from that.

    • @cory9919
      @cory9919 8 месяцев назад +14

      According to an interview I think with either Hans or Nolan, he actually told him to make a song between a father and son. Nolan didn't disclose that it was between a father and daughter.

    • @Felicity_D._Shroom
      @Felicity_D._Shroom 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@cory9919 That may be the case I just don’t remember

  • @clarapilier
    @clarapilier 9 месяцев назад +181

    If it helps, Jessica Chastain said that Interstellar was Nolan's love letter to his daughter.

    • @dmitrihoule7866
      @dmitrihoule7866 4 месяца назад +3

      To back up this statement; there's some pictures of Christopher Nolan and his daughter behind the scenes of Interstellar and she looks a LOT like young Murph

    • @goat9295
      @goat9295 3 месяца назад +1

      If he has a son, all I can tell him is "I'm so sorry"

  • @flshcrd
    @flshcrd 7 месяцев назад +127

    people make fun of the acting of him watching the tapes back from his trip to the wave planet, but it genuinely made me cry the first time and i felt it coming watching it again to refresh myself for this video. it truly does to me feel like the breaking down of someone who’s decision cost him an entire life with his kids and the regret a father would feel for that choice

    • @moonman8450
      @moonman8450 7 месяцев назад +20

      How can you make fun of that? It tears me apart every time….

    • @DaniJ2891
      @DaniJ2891 6 месяцев назад +4

      I love Mathew, he reminds of Jeff Bridges

    • @DavidRYates-tk2tq
      @DavidRYates-tk2tq 6 месяцев назад +14

      People make fun of that? Why? It's amazing acting!

    • @Theeclarencebird
      @Theeclarencebird 5 месяцев назад +10

      It’s not making fun of it, it’s just become a meme, it’s a good reaction

    • @joshreyes3624
      @joshreyes3624 4 месяца назад

      As a father of two girls myself, I can 100% guarantee I'd be crying even worse than he did. People shouldn't make fun of it, it's not something they have even imagined. I have, and the weight of the pain of regret and damaging the irreplaceable strings of relationships, coupled with the desperation of wanting to fix it when you have no power to do so... being at the mercy of the fate that lies outside your control, propagated by your own choices, makes you feel the strongest guilt, shame, and self hatred you will ever experience.
      I can tell you exactly what he was thinking. "I will never see her smile again. I'll never see her eyes light up when I walk into the room, I'll never hear her call me daddy, I'll never feel those tiny arms wrapped around my neck in an embrace of safety and trust... I'll never see my baby girl again."
      People who make fun of a father over the loss of his children, physically or spiritually, _DON'T_ know that pain.

  • @joshdyer3270
    @joshdyer3270 8 месяцев назад +154

    I've always wondered what causes certain movies too make me feel something so deeply. I actually cried when the main character was in the tesseract watching his daughter... shits powerful as hell

    • @daytradersanonymous9955
      @daytradersanonymous9955 6 месяцев назад

      You spend too much time "imagining" life

    • @dora3743
      @dora3743 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@daytradersanonymous9955 No, he doesn't.

  • @seank218
    @seank218 9 месяцев назад +87

    I think that people like The Nostalgia Critic strangled internet cinema discourse for about a decade. He and his peers contributed to a cynical, nitpicky, and adversarial trend of armchair film analysis. I think that acclaimed masterpieces such as Everything Everywhere All At Once would have been mercilessly shat upon by internet pseudointellectuals ten years ago.

    • @HowardWimshurst
      @HowardWimshurst 6 месяцев назад +8

      We're making our way out of those dark ages now

    • @izzyb1662
      @izzyb1662 3 месяца назад +1

      Definitely. There is comedy in cynicism and over exaggeration but we need to to be careful to not let that bleed into our perceptions of all movies. I’m reminded of Cinema Sins- they claim to be satire but their fans sure do take every “sin” or “error” for gospel, and I don’t want to imagine what they feel, or the lack thereof, watching movies with that mindset.

  • @ozla3489
    @ozla3489 6 месяцев назад +38

    Just like Interstellar, I wish I could forget this video just to watch it all over again for the first time. You did a truly spectacular job, one of the best comprehensive breakdowns of Interstellar that I have seen.

  • @K4F0
    @K4F0 8 месяцев назад +11

    inception and interstellar are two of the best movies i have ever watched

  • @TA-qw8vs
    @TA-qw8vs 9 месяцев назад +99

    I normally do not comment on videos. But this video managed to make me understand why i love this movie THAT much. This video made me understand that it is okay to like this movie despite its obvious flaws in terms of storyboard and such. Thank you so so much.

    • @jarlwhiterun7478
      @jarlwhiterun7478 8 месяцев назад

      I've seen dozens, nay hundreds of your comments already!

    • @TA-qw8vs
      @TA-qw8vs 8 месяцев назад

      @@jarlwhiterun7478 oh really? Then maybe you could Show me one of those? Because I never commented on a Video before lol

    • @daytradersanonymous9955
      @daytradersanonymous9955 6 месяцев назад

      Too much NEED for public enabling in this culture

    • @jasonberg7644
      @jasonberg7644 5 месяцев назад

      I honestly never understood why people get so bent out of shape when a movie gets criticized for plot holes or flaws. Enjoy movies for what they're worth and give them a chance. Too often I see people trying to find issues with a movie instead of just sitting back and letting themselves get immersed in the story. Maybe, just maybe, if viewers did that they might actually have a good time.

  • @Doofwarrior88
    @Doofwarrior88 9 месяцев назад +37

    Interstellar is Christopher Nolans 2001 A space odyssey. This movie is by far my most favorite of his.

  • @shayharvey1174
    @shayharvey1174 9 месяцев назад +154

    I just want to take some time to let you know how much I appreciate your work. My God! Not very many videos on RUclips bring me to tears but your videos always manage to get me there. Thank you once again and if it's a team, thanks to everyone. These videos are simply beautiful.

  • @MarkEleve
    @MarkEleve 6 месяцев назад +17

    I can’t remember a cinema experience, where I felt more invested and on the edge of my seat. I had goosebumps so many times. I loved the music and all the performances. And I will never forget the ending, where I literally stood up in the cinema and shouted „It was him!“. I was just so moved by this movie that I could not control my body in this moment. Interstellar is to this day my favorite movie of all time.

    • @robynmarler1951
      @robynmarler1951 4 месяца назад

      You must have been quite the spectacle😂

  • @paddyq3235
    @paddyq3235 9 месяцев назад +8

    I hardcore disagree about interstellar being a bad allegory for climate change. Actually I disgree with that being a negative of the film. Climate change, and more importantly human's part in it has very little to do with the narrative. The movie explores themes of love, and reality (my struggle to meaningfully identify themes beyond a very basic level is 100% an issue with this film and tbh Nolan's film as a whole). Anways I would agree it is a bad allegory but how does that affect the narrative. Human kind causing the blight vs not causing it doesnt change the narrative or the meaning of it whatsoever.

  • @Almost_Savvy
    @Almost_Savvy 9 месяцев назад +103

    It's crazy this channel isn't bigger. Great job.

  • @searsino
    @searsino 8 месяцев назад +15

    the soundtrack is so vital to the impact of Nolan's films... Every time I finish a film where he collabs with Zimmer, I find myself in awe. The way Hans manages to draw out so much genuine emotion on screen has me dumbfounded every single time.

  • @johnnybhoff226
    @johnnybhoff226 9 месяцев назад +48

    Bro I can’t even start to explain how much I love this movie. It’s an absolute theatrical masterpiece. So happy so see a video essay on it!

  • @kjugirl
    @kjugirl 9 месяцев назад +41

    Love the movie and have rewatched it several times. What i always missed was a scene with Brent meeting Cooper on the new planet. Her pov until he meets up with her is that she is the last human basically and all the babies she has to raise alone....damn.

    • @daito7729
      @daito7729 4 месяца назад

      I'm pretty sure cooper goes back for her at the end of the movie no?

    • @user-hv8dg1tx7b
      @user-hv8dg1tx7b 20 дней назад +1

      I agree. I also love books that show loads of scenes from how life goes on from here. It was the kind of film you don't feel the passing of time so five or ten more minutes wouldn't have hurt

  • @Runningheartluvsart
    @Runningheartluvsart 7 месяцев назад +13

    I remember my friend, convincing me to sit down and watch this with him, and as my brain kind of blanked at the ending, trying to process what I just watched, I heard him quietly sobbing to himself, tears streaming down his face at this wonderful movie

  • @IamLotion
    @IamLotion 9 месяцев назад +15

    Damn bro. This made me tear up.

  • @morganleanderblake678
    @morganleanderblake678 9 месяцев назад +24

    I feel like Nolan movies are best absorbed if you accept that he is creating a whole story for you, and the "pat" and "weirdly foreshadowed" parts are just part of his created mythos for this one tale. He's creating one whole story, so yeah, obviously everything is connected.

    • @morganleanderblake678
      @morganleanderblake678 7 месяцев назад +2

      Coming back to this because it haunts my brain:
      I see Nolan as a modern fable author or storyteller.
      Take the hare and the tortoise, which is probably the most famous. We're told in a cheeky way that the tortoise still wants to race and despite the obvious, that we should disregard him, we keep checking back in with the tortoise and seeing his progress as the hare is lazy.
      The foreshadowing doesn't undercut the message - those stories are intended to impart the lesson so obviously the information is structured to do that.
      It would be weird to be like, "god why are we focused on the tortoise isn't that just a little pat and expected?" Because... yes, it is. It is expected because fables are a self contained lesson. Because why would someone tell you a story with attention to specific parts unless they cared that you noticed them?
      A lot of screenplays and movies seem to suffer analysis around an idea of forced realism or a responsibility to be believable. I don't go to movies to see reality; that would be boring. I really appreciate a whole story.

  • @christiangeisner2928
    @christiangeisner2928 8 месяцев назад +15

    I fell asleep the first time I saw it cause I was too young, but once I've gotten older, I rewatched it, and it became one of my favorite movies ever.

  • @isahamilton01
    @isahamilton01 9 месяцев назад +85

    There are so many film analysis channels on youtube now but yours has always stuck out, only one I’ve got notifications for besides PBS Space Time. Thank you for the delicious content I am starved 🍖

  • @Vi_Vi_1
    @Vi_Vi_1 9 месяцев назад +37

    Thank you for putting into words why I love this movie so much. I've always been very scientific and logical but there's something about the way you have to have the logic and still FEEL this movie that's so powerful. I love all the scientific accuracy in this but I also love how at the end you need the emotion to drive it forward, and make it make sense. Brand's speech about love makes me emotional every time because doesn't love feel so profound and transcendent to us? Don't we fight hardest for those we love? Isn't that the thing that drives us above all else? Utterly beautiful, thank you for this great analysis of one of my favorite movies

    • @eileensnow6153
      @eileensnow6153 9 месяцев назад +2

      “Love is the one thing we’re capable of perceiving that can transcend time and space.”
      “We love people that have died. Where’s the social utility in that?”

  • @smartwater598
    @smartwater598 9 месяцев назад +9

    Remember when every insecure yt males was complaining about interstellar theme being about love?😂

  • @draig8259
    @draig8259 8 месяцев назад +13

    This video essay is sublime, beautiful, and perfect, just like its subject matter. You get everything that the film is trying to do and replicate exactly the feeling it gave me when I first watched it a year ago. When this film first came out, I was 14 years old, deeply cynical and skeptical, above any kind of sappy storytelling and perhaps even a bit personally distrustful of writers who prioritized feeling over "logic". I think if I had seen this film back then, I would have mocked it and insulted it just for the sake of feeling smart; now I realize, as you seem to, that this is an immature and defensive attitude that stops us from connecting to and understanding other people, and ourselves, through stories - and why else do we write stories in the first place?
    I'm trying in earnest to be a writer right now, and working slowly on a novel (this isn't a self-plug of any kind, just some context) and it's content like this that helps me contextualize my feelings about stories, dig into what I find important about narratives and how I have to tell them. I think you touched on the vulnerability of writing and of listening to stories perfectly in part IV; there's a part of us that wants to resist being too honest with ourselves about our emotions, and treat stories as some kind of calculative process, like how Mann tries to cover up the guilt he's feeling with stories about biological instincts. It's really a difficult thing to give oneself over completely to *feeling* a story, because it means accepting whatever part of yourself the story truly speaks to rather than trying to fight it, and I think the same goes for writing a story. I hope every day that myself and all other aspiring writers can find the courage to write and experience stories as they come to us, not how we *think* they ought to be.
    Anyway, I hope you got something out of this comment; your devotion to storytelling just made me want to spill my thoughts out here.

  • @laggywarrior9014
    @laggywarrior9014 9 месяцев назад +17

    I cannot wait to watch this after work, one of my fav movies

  • @fayem4091
    @fayem4091 9 месяцев назад +5

    Because dad promised me still made me ugly cry

  • @brett_zesty
    @brett_zesty 9 месяцев назад +20

    I have an issue with your framing of the "blight" as a poor allegory for human-induced climate change. There is a reason Nolan chose crops like corn and okra to highlight -- we HAVE real corollaries to this, specifically in monoculture farming. One notorious example is the banana. The ONLY commonly available species of banana in supermarkets everywhere is the Cavendish banana. All it will take is ONE strain of virus or fungus developing resistance to antibiotics and selective gene modification and we will forever lose the global crop to 'blight.' So, i do not think Nolan was reaching at all implying that near future humanity would be faced with the consequences of us permanently destroying Earth's biodiversity -- we already live the early effects of it.

    • @oharakatie14
      @oharakatie14 8 месяцев назад +6

      I always took the blight at face value because for these characters, it’s already here. It doesn’t matter why it happened. It’s just now something they have to deal with.

    • @martinrheaume5393
      @martinrheaume5393 8 месяцев назад +4

      I have a problem with a framing too but a different one. As far as I know nobody ever claimed it was an allegory for climate change so it seems unreasonable to force it into that box and then complain that it doesn't meet all the criteria

  • @vrikt0r427
    @vrikt0r427 9 месяцев назад +25

    I didnt know, i needed this video, but now i know i have.
    This is my Favourite movie of all time and FINALLY i can say that someone expressed the feeling that i always have when i see it.
    Thank you for This video, just gained a sub.

  • @Ag_33
    @Ag_33 9 месяцев назад +9

    Oh hell yeah my one of my favorite video essayists making a video on the movie perhaps closest to my heart and mind.

  • @guist_
    @guist_ 9 месяцев назад +16

    incredible video. you might have seen the one from I believe Thomas Flight on metamodernism ? like him I believe we have entered an era of newfound sincerity in art production and consumption and I am so so here for it. The cinemasins, ultra rationalist brainrot damaged the way millions of people have experienced movies in the past 10-15 years and it makes me so sad. But attitudes evolve and EEAA and its success were a great example of that. I think we've started as audiences to be a bit less concerned with heartfeltness and oversentimentaly as negatives in stories. I think we can observe the gears shifting and the public opinion moving towards a more poetic and compassionate look on everything and that's wonderful.
    Thankyou for your video you captured those ideas wonderfully. Nolan was pretty hurt by the reception of Tenet and I think Oppenheimer and the messaging he had about that movie is really much a response to the way Tenet was perceived. He's a feelings' man contrary to what people try to put on him and I believe there are multiple lines in Openheimer that are in direct response to his detractors I need to get my hands on a copy of the film to look at it more closely.. maybe I'll write an addendum to this comment.
    anyway thanks again for your work. I discovered you during the Planet of the Apes essays and I think those, the KungFuPanda video and now this are the crown jewels of your channel.
    thank you for all your hard work, craft and vision
    have a very good day,
    anne

  • @g.williamwoodward6676
    @g.williamwoodward6676 9 месяцев назад +16

    The blight was refreshing. Any modern theories of climate change brought on by humans would have been eye rolling. That’s why Nolan is amazing. It’s like he knows the top 100 eye roll issues of Hollywood and either avoids them or thinks of another take. TDKR was anti Occupy Wall Street, it was about villains who read too much Rules of Radicals. Oppenheimer wasn’t anti bombing Japan, it was anti making the bomb. Interstellar wasn’t anti human, it was pro adaption. Thank God for Nolan saving Hollywood.

    • @martinrheaume5393
      @martinrheaume5393 8 месяцев назад +1

      So glad he didn't make a climate change allegory.

  • @gallifrog6144
    @gallifrog6144 9 месяцев назад +10

    Watching this video helped me understand why I love Interstellar so much. It's a film to be felt and experienced, not to simply be watched. Interstellar's stunning score and cinematography pick me up and sweep me along through an emotional journey. It's not about the story as such, it's about the feelings the movie evokes in you
    Hans Zimmer's score is probably the greatets strength of this movie, along with the masterful use of silence in suspenseful scenes give sgoosebumps every time. The soundscaping and the stunning visuals mesh together to create something truly beautiful. The first time I watched this movie I was swept up by it, my heart was in my throat and I just felt. I felt this movie like no other
    An amazing video!

  • @fulcrum8583
    @fulcrum8583 9 месяцев назад +6

    In act 4 the movie cleverly uses what we can already extrapolate hypothetically about the physics inside a black hole (beyond the threshold of its event horizon, to be precise). Here, the dimensions of space and time change places - time becomes space-like as in you can move back and forth and sideways in it, while space becomes time-like, as in you are always pulled along with space-time towards the singularity, which is now your unescapable future and destination. The beings who build the "artifact" which allows Cooper to communicate with Murph in the past clearly use these physics within the black hole, which is neat.
    On annother note: I will never understand how someone could watch and perceive a movie solely from an objective angle, only becoming involved in the logistics of plot and plausibility and logic. It is like exclusively using one of your senses to observe and explore the world. It is the antithesis of cinema and art in general.

  • @KasDlonewolf
    @KasDlonewolf 4 месяца назад +1

    When I saw Interstellar in theatres, as a younger engineering student, most of my engineering fellows decried the movie for it's focus on "Love".
    Vindication!!!!

  • @upsetstudios1819
    @upsetstudios1819 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm so glad I have video notifications on, this video was amazing and perfect for a rainy night

  • @lionsxxden
    @lionsxxden 8 месяцев назад +2

    My guy
    Wtf just happened to me...
    I... feel so warm and inspired
    how dare you

  • @CLLily1
    @CLLily1 9 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you. Every video you make truly makes me feel something profound. It helps me think that things in this life do matter. So thanks for sharing your art with us ❤

  • @andrewdzierwa1270
    @andrewdzierwa1270 9 месяцев назад +7

    thank you so much for this. this is my favorite movie of all time. the whole idea of the movie, time love hope faith it always brings me to tears. thank you so much.

  • @hvadkant6066
    @hvadkant6066 8 месяцев назад +6

    This was iincredible. Loved your reflections on art and human purpose at the end. Thank you!

  • @SANTAtheGREY
    @SANTAtheGREY 9 месяцев назад +6

    simply beautiful to watch, another fantastic essay! 😍

  • @wa-uf4qq
    @wa-uf4qq 6 месяцев назад +5

    Dude... great video, might sound unusual but you kinda saved my life with that video. I was hopeless and was trying to find a purpose and you explayning that movie so well and saying the things you did made a lot of things in my head clear, opened my self for love again and understand myself. thank you for that even tho, it might have not been intentional.

    • @_ZenMF
      @_ZenMF 6 месяцев назад

      I'm glad you're here

  • @joeybruh916
    @joeybruh916 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is one of the most beautiful videos I have ever watched and it’s about a movie I cherish so much. Thank you for all your time and effort in creating this amazing video. Love, Love, Love.

  • @cherb0675
    @cherb0675 9 месяцев назад +4

    Dude wtf this was incredible subbing and going through the catalog this was a masterpiece in itself

  • @UgnineLape
    @UgnineLape 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great video, deep analysis, amazing quality, thank you!

  • @efernandes8763
    @efernandes8763 5 месяцев назад +1

    This video made me feel. Thank you!

  • @smedwaseen2254
    @smedwaseen2254 6 месяцев назад

    This is an incredible video and I sincerely thank you for creating it.

  • @Froglord669
    @Froglord669 8 месяцев назад +1

    I'm crying, this is beautiful

  • @NotAlwaysBilly
    @NotAlwaysBilly 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love this so much. Thank you for making this video. I love it.

  • @kbmamba8243
    @kbmamba8243 9 месяцев назад

    Great video man I always enjoy your vids. Keep up the awesome work

  • @rachel933
    @rachel933 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for articulating what Interstellar is all about. Your explanation on love and emotions is awe-inspiring and is truly a masterpiece! Made me cry happy tears.

  • @MtvTheRwRr
    @MtvTheRwRr 6 месяцев назад

    This is one of my favourite videos on youtube. Fantastic job.

  • @OMGoobero
    @OMGoobero 2 месяца назад +1

    55:30 this scene made my jaw drop, the intensity before and the silence that ensues after.

  • @charliekeen7539
    @charliekeen7539 6 месяцев назад

    That was a beautiful video. Really enjoyed well done for producing such great work 👏🏻

  • @christopheredge9002
    @christopheredge9002 9 месяцев назад +3

    I loved this movie since I first saw it. But hearing this perspective on it made me appreciate it even more. Made me love art even more. And your art is something magical as well

  • @jtbproductions7415
    @jtbproductions7415 9 месяцев назад +1

    My favourite Film Analysis Channel, you go deep into symbolic meaning and the art of these films and its good to know im not the only one who sees these films and have deep passion for them.

  • @XisteviediX
    @XisteviediX 8 месяцев назад +1

    What a beautifully well done video!!

  • @Kelps_K
    @Kelps_K 6 месяцев назад

    Very happy to have come across this this video on my RUclips feed. Thank you for a beautiful philosophical movie analysis.

  • @leelagg8866
    @leelagg8866 3 месяца назад +1

    this is one of the most beautiful videos i’ve ever seen, genuinely
    i hope everyday is a new day to love and laugh with people you care about for everyone

  • @vpardude
    @vpardude 5 месяцев назад +1

    You have done an excellent job in narrating this amazing movie for us. Thank you!!

  • @Devil-Made
    @Devil-Made 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think this might be my favorite recent movie. Imagine how excited I was to see my favorite creator covering this film. Thank you. I just started, but I know this is going to be a great ride.

  • @nataliearmbruster
    @nataliearmbruster Месяц назад

    I’m sobbing. This was amazing. Just thank you.

  • @gordonwerner
    @gordonwerner 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you, for all of this.

  • @ruaheadjunkee2
    @ruaheadjunkee2 9 месяцев назад +1

    Well done. Interstellar is easily my favorite film or at least in my top 3. Thanks to you for capturing it in words better than I could have.

  • @ollietipper
    @ollietipper 8 месяцев назад

    Incredibly well done video, thank you.

  • @Sugar3Glider
    @Sugar3Glider 9 месяцев назад +1

    This video really was amazing, as always.

  • @lorddoinkus9912
    @lorddoinkus9912 8 месяцев назад +2

    I would like to note that it's not called "the blight" it's just blight and it's a very real thing today. It refers to the browning and eventually death of the plant and is caused by fungal spores. Interstellar is dealing with a potentially roided up version of blight hence the extinction of crop species. Just putting that out there.

  • @ALittleToTheLeft42
    @ALittleToTheLeft42 9 месяцев назад

    Your videos are amazing, and that doesn't do them justice by a long shot.

  • @andrewg6598
    @andrewg6598 9 месяцев назад

    I have no words, not like you do, just feelings. I always appreciate your perspectives.

  • @tompollockjr144
    @tompollockjr144 9 месяцев назад

    Beautifully made video. Well done!

  • @liberpolo5540
    @liberpolo5540 9 месяцев назад +1

    The speed in which this is becoming my new favorite channel...!

  • @jpsithlord
    @jpsithlord 8 месяцев назад +1

    The first time I’ve seen this I was in tears and awe. I loved it. I still listen to the ost to this day. One the best movies I’ve ever seen and the best Nolan film

  • @lazysayso
    @lazysayso 9 месяцев назад

    gave a thumbs up before I even clicked play. Love that there are still videos being made about this film! My fav movie of all time dont @ me

  • @benjaminwaters241
    @benjaminwaters241 9 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks for such a wonderful video. I really enjoyed Interstellar when it came out but I never engaged with it like I did with Inception or The Dark Knight. Almost a decade later I've rewatched it now that I'm a father and suddenly it's one of my favourite movies of all time.

  • @rottensquid
    @rottensquid 9 месяцев назад +19

    Apropos of your last point, I don't think it's as simple as people having an adversarial relationship with movies. I think it's more complex.
    Malcolm Gladwell had an interesting little think piece about the development of All in the Family. The network that originally commissioned the pilot ran it through the routine process of test audiences, and it tested very poorly, at 40%. The network that picked it up also ran it by a test audience, and got a similar result. It only went to series because the CEO of CBS just had a feeling the test audience wasn't telling the whole story. And within six months, it was the number one show in TV.
    The conclusion Malcolm came to was that people can't tell the difference between something they don't like, and something they find emotionally challenging. And these days, people can't just dislike something, be re-exposed to it a few times, and eventually change their tune about it in private. Now, we announce to the peanut gallery what we think, and so sticking to our guns becomes a matter of pride. Some people really don't want to admit they were wrong. And they also think that, even for something as subjective as liking a movie or a show, their opinion is objective truth. They can't just dislike it, it has to be objectively bad. And they can't change their mind about it, because then seeing it as bad was their mistake, rather than the show's fault.
    So all these weird attitudes combine to mean that a huge section of the audience thinks their first hot take on anything and everything is the last word. And they take any other opinion as a challenge to them personally. So they defend their opinion about a movie as stubbornly as if it was their very identity they're defending. It's insanely unreasonable. And let's be very clear, here, we have all done this. All of us.
    I think this issue is particularly poignant with a movie like Interstellar, because the thing that people struggle with the most about it is its "sentimentality." And of course, I think this is no accident on the part of Chris Nolan. Whether he's aware of it or not, he designs movies to challenge the audience through their own reaction, even their resistance, to the movie. Brandt's speech about the "power of love," just the way it's written and its placement in the story, is designed specifically to trigger a rational rejection. And that rational rejection places us in the role of Cooper, the self-described "explorer" who dares not even speculate beyond the known physical forces of the universe. In the language of another great Nolan film, Brandt's speech is Interstellar's pledge. The rest of the film delivers on that pledge, proving the hard truth of this sentimental notion.
    Nolan films don't want to, or need to, develop the characters beyond these basic concepts and drives. We don't need to get to know Cooper, or Dom Cobb, or The Protagonist as multi-layered human beings, because their sole purpose is to contain the basic wants, needs, and biases established within the movie. As those things are established in the character, they're established inside us. We want to see them get what they want. That's just how stories work. They don't need Carmy Berzatto's hang-ups, or Don Draper's paranoia and self-loathing, or Midge Maisel's unexamined privilege. That would only complicate the issue, making us second-guess their desires before they do. That's not what Nolan's stories are for. His characters need only one simple dramatic desire to create a direct link between the character and the viewer. And as their quest transforms them, it transforms us.
    So when Brandt delivers her speech, we hear it the way Cooper hears it, as unscientific sentiment. And when the movie proves it to be the universe's guiding principle, the movie transforms us, showing us the power of love as a hard, scientific fact.
    All this is to say that what people think of as plot holes in this film are a necessary part of the film's experience. They're the point. We don't have to understand things to feel the truth of them. It's only when our intellect steps in to explain it all, but comes up short, that we begin an adversarial relationship with the film. We're not demanding the film prove itself, we're demanding it explain its meaning to us on a level we can intellectually understand. And with the subject matter of Nolan films, that's not always possible. Not does he regard it as entirely necessary. The reason he's still the most celebrated filmmaker of our time is that, even if we don't understand his films, we go anyway, trying to get to the bottom of what they make us feel.
    My favorite quote from Neil Gaiman, brilliantly quotable and an all around nice guy, is as follows: "Don't trust the storyteller, only the story." I took that to mean we should spend less time second-guessing what the storyteller meant, and more time trying to find the story's meaning in our own reaction to it. We love picking apart stories, what we think they're trying to accomplish, and how well it worked. But I think all too often, if we don't know why a story is doing something, our first assumption is that it made a mistake, rather than imagining that it might be saying something we don't yet understand. I think our first duty to a story is to trust it, to accept everything it's doing as part of its plan, even if we can't understand that plan. Otherwise, we dismiss what we don't understand as the film's failure, when really, it's just a step in our own journey.

    • @b.m.3944
      @b.m.3944 7 месяцев назад +1

      Reading this was an absolute pleasure and you should either pick up writing or start your own channel

  • @glassandhoney
    @glassandhoney 9 месяцев назад

    You moved me. Thank you.

  • @kaye3739
    @kaye3739 6 месяцев назад +1

    That was beautiful I’m laying on my bed crying.

  • @bobnavonvictorsteyn9017
    @bobnavonvictorsteyn9017 9 месяцев назад +5

    this is the best analysis video i’ve ever seen

  • @raiyanchowdhury8541
    @raiyanchowdhury8541 5 месяцев назад

    I loved this. You are a very talented individual and you have amazing storytelling abilities. Subscribing for sure.

  • @carlitox2121
    @carlitox2121 5 месяцев назад

    Wow...What a video. Thanks for this

  • @robinettebroadhead7677
    @robinettebroadhead7677 9 месяцев назад

    Such a great video!

  • @jmlouie
    @jmlouie 7 месяцев назад

    I really like the conclusion you bring at the end. 👏👏👏

  • @ryankillough9606
    @ryankillough9606 8 месяцев назад

    Wow, very well done my friend! Extremely entertaining and eye opening monologue about this movie.

  • @RDJaay
    @RDJaay 5 месяцев назад

    I love storystreet, started watching during the apes series, and this is my favourite movie of all time and im so happy to at least have it covered on the channel. Love the video brother good stuff!

  • @roochiee
    @roochiee 9 месяцев назад +3

    wow as soon as i rewatch this movie i get this video recommended to me absolutely amazing video dude

  • @myetherealcosmos
    @myetherealcosmos 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this.

  • @jeepinovertheworld
    @jeepinovertheworld 4 месяца назад

    Beautifully broken down. ❤ thank you

  • @Upsidedowndog27
    @Upsidedowndog27 4 месяца назад

    I absolutely loved this video. I love interstellar and I love how in depth you went. I feel like I Truly have a good understanding of this movie now and I’ll have to watch it again with these ideas in mind. Thanks bro and keep posting plz

  • @jonthedawn
    @jonthedawn 3 месяца назад

    Same! This went over my head in 2014.. now one of my absolute favorite films!

  • @joshdyer3270
    @joshdyer3270 8 месяцев назад +1

    Feeling connected too characters is definitely the thing that makes me love a movie. Feeling something deep within yourself is getting more and more rare nowadays in films

  • @myspink
    @myspink 9 месяцев назад

    I felt a lot of the things you mentioned when i watched this movie, and i felt something a little different watching this video. Good job giving people things to feel!

  • @taadegd832
    @taadegd832 8 месяцев назад

    absolutely amazing

  • @annettelouise6781
    @annettelouise6781 6 месяцев назад

    This is a lovely vid. I feel it.

  • @zakhikes
    @zakhikes 9 месяцев назад

    Fantastic video!

  • @drankin_barry6005
    @drankin_barry6005 9 месяцев назад

    Great analysis bro! Well spoken! I’m glad you made this story about a story…. Nolan style!