I like how she appreciates the art in these movies and doesn't ridicule, gets mad, or criticize the scenes. She simply smiles when see something not realistic.
The crazy thing is, she didn't ridicule a single thing about Armageddon. That was a nice surprise. I like this series by Wired, because they seem to pick experts that are usually movie fans themselves.
ITS MORE CAUSE SHE HAS BEEN IN THE EXACT SITUATION AS THOSE ACTORS IN THE MOVIES WITH NO DIFFERENCE AS TO WHAT SHE ACTUALLY DID IN REALITY AS WELL... ALL GREEN SCREENS AND ALL. : D
This lady is so humble in the way she speaks, without showing that she's really that great. I don't understand how she can maintain that level of humility with all her achievements, it's amazing!
I think its because you know you are a part of a team and there were thousands of people working so you could become an astronaut so you want to appreciate their effort.
@@werrkowalski2985 Yeah, that's kinda true. But let's also remember how many years of dedication they put their individual efforts leading to that time in space, whether health-wise, fitness and accumulating knowledge of problem solving everything about anything in space. That is surely more commendable, right?
@S Anderson I disagree here because being balanced and working well under pressure is among the reasons that make most people proud and give them a feeling of deep pleasure or satisfaction as a result of their own achievements. The fact that this lady does not show this despite her over achievements is extremely rare and very commendable. Almost an impossibility for many with such skills.
She's a bit wrong here tho. When talking Spaceballs - if you would travel near speed of light all "stars" would be visible as bringht lines. Some physicists talked about it
i find it so genuinly amazing that this lady has been all the way into actual space, done god knows what complicated smart stuff while in space, come hurtling down back to earth and is here to talk about space scenes casually. What an absolute legend!!!
The one thing that always strikes me when I listen to astronauts, is just how laidback, calm and intelligent they are. Astronauts like Chris Hadfield, Tim Peak and this fabulous astronaut Nicole Stott, they just always come across so well when speaking, a joy to listen to!
You have to have perfect social skills as an astronaut because they will never allow anyone with signs of psychotic or flawed mental bursts in a serious position just like any very important (lives at stake) career
This is the reason why I disliked "Gravity". I was so disappointed that Sandra Bullock's character was so panicky and crying all the time. I had expected an astronaut to keep her cool even in dangerous situations.
@@mwwwww648 "they" is the voters. We have the ability to prevent that. For some reason, we instead regularly choose these types to lead us. What does that say?
I met a molecular biologist that struck me the same way. I think if you have a job that really challenges you and stimulates your intellect it just leaves you a happier, more relaxed person.
She didn't even understand the first two things presented to her. The first being would the body react like that, not would the helmet crack. And the second being jetpacks and she said no they aren't that large, but in the clip they presented they showed the jet pack is just part of that large pack.
MisterWealth you clearly didn’t listen to everything she said then. 1) she said the helmet likely wouldn’t crack like that, which is a fair assessment of the movie. So that’s what she decided to focus on because it was funny. 2) she noted that they had jet packs but that astronauts wouldn’t be using them to just fly around. They only used them in dire situations. The jet pack situation was about space walks and she took note of the situations in that movie that would be highly unlikely, like using the jet packs like that.
disliked the video bc she's a woman. Obviously another SJW pr move to put her instead of any male astronauts even though there are 10 times as many. What are the odds?
To all the butthurt men complaining about how this was a woman: Did you stop to think that maybe this woman was the only astronaut 1) available, 2) personable/good-humored, and 3) good at explaining difficult concepts to laypeople?
@@elenaatkinson1622 1) 10 percent chance with this so, No. . 2) I agree with that. 3) I agree with that. I'm not butthurt with her, you're butthurt with meritocracy because you pick her against meritocracy.
I love how she compliments on everything. She finds the humour funny and gently elaborates on what actually would happen without insulting the movie. Amazing person.
I’d like to see a professional diver evaluate diving scenes. There’s so many great movies with diving scenes where things go wrong and they have to get out of it, and there’s plenty of movies that take those things to extremes as well!
I know right, i mainly just wanted to see interstellar and the Martian, they covered a tiny little bit of interstellar but didn't even mention the Martian. Oh well, maybe next time.....
NASA and Wired are really coming out with content that's exciting everyone about Space. I feel like I'm a bystander in some space race era space technology boom thing stuff
Lol....they "landed" on the moon in 69....and NO ONE has been back or even tried since. And you think that you live in a space race boom? Wonder what the folks back in 69 thought. Stop being gullible and use w.e is left of your brain.
I’m so glad she said that the scene where Sandra Bullock’s character ignores NASA’s command to abort bothers her. When that movie came out, I felt like I was the only person that absolutely hated it. It felt like some idiot Hollywood writer said, “Hmm, how can I create drama? I know, lets take the best trained humans in history, have them ignore every bit of training they have ever had, panic uncontrollably, and survive pretty much by pure luck!”. Hated Gravity!!!
I don’t think her character was an astronaut, she was like a mildly trained doctor or something. The movie was awful but seeing it in theaters was awesome, it’s a beautiful movie.
Same! I can't watch it. The visuals are gorgeous, but I get too frustrated at that, and of course it's the woman who is the one that does that (despite the fact that the most experienced astronaut right now is a bloody woman!)
what i expected: “haha look how ridiculous all these sci fi movies are” what i got: “you would feel the liquids in your body boil out through your skin”
She didn't say that. Blood and/or water will NOT boil through your skin. You heard wrong. She said that bodily fluids already exposed to the vacuum of space (ie, saliva and whatever fluid that's on your eyes) will evaporate.. Saliva doesn't come through your skin.
@@Nghilifa Liquids will evaporate under your skin though, causing swelling. It won't burst like the movies depicted because your skin can stretch but you'd basically look and be like a swollen balloon. Blood is an exception to this though since your blood pressure is automatically regulated by your body.
Interstellar is one of the best movies of all time, cinematography, sound and editing. Now I know they also perfectly simulated what would happen in outer space in those situations. Christopher Nolan is a genius who brings other geniuses around him to make eternal masterpieces. Also, I appreciate Nicole's way of explaining complex concepts in such a simple way.
Not only that but the visual representation of a black hole is now the most scientifically accurate visualization of a black hole. They use real physic equations to simulate it, thought it was a bug at first but soon realize that it was what a black hole would look like with what we understand about physic. They even wrote scientific papers on the subject.
For convenience: 00:15 - Cracking helmets - Total Recall (1990) 01:31 - Spacewalk - Gravity (2013) 05:20 - Ludicrous speed - Spaceballs (1987) 06:54 - Robotic arm on the ISS - Life (2017) 08:57 - Astronaut training - First Man (2018) 10:27 - Training montage - Armageddon (1998) 12:58 - Removing helmet in space - Mission to Mars (2000) 13:43 - Docking a spacecraft - Interstellar (2014) 16:50 - AI on spaceships - 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) 17:51 - Sharing oxygen in a spacesuit - Rocketman (1997) 19:17 - Airlock - Event Horizon (1997) 21:33 - Self-destruct button - Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) 23:05 - G-Force training - Space Cowboys (2000) 24:03 - Getting sucked into space - Alien: Resurrection (1997) 25:16 - Crying in space - Gravity (2013)
It's like a lot of dangerous careers. Inside, you know the risks, and you do take those seriously (unless you're an idiot), but you also need to be able to get past that and not be consumed by anxiety etc. Personally, I approach it as what your priorities are, as well as confidence in yourself and your team. I've done some extremely dangerous things, and I feel like I always remind myself of the dangers even if I tried to play it safe (the risk of car crash etc.).
The fact they have a "self destruct" sequence in ground control TERRIFIES ME HOLY WHAT. I mean, makes sense, but still "guys you're off course one degree, sorry, gotta boom ya"
I love how she was able to enjoy the crazier representation of some of these and have a laugh. She looked at the possibilities and also talked about how they did it in such a way to for the viewer to understand even if it won't realistically happen (such as the passing the gas scene). In other videos like this, some just kinda took it a bit too seriously.
I think we have this stereotypes that experts don't appreciate movies about their field because they would be nitpicking. This series of videos has really taught me that people will enjoy movies for being movies even when they're not realistic. Also, really knowledgeable and intelligent people should all be this humble. Really cool woman.
SuperPunch76 the whole movie was pretty accurate when it came to the space scenes according to other NASA astronauts that have reviewed those sequences.
Interstellar as a whole is fairly accurate. Nolan had physicists and other scientists overseeing it to make it as accurate as he could. Obviously there were some imaginative liberties taken during certain certain scenes like falling into the black hole. Nobody knows what’s inside a black hole, so at that point it’s free range to do whatever you want.
@SuperPunch76 Actually most experts stated ALOT of the movie was very accurate. The blackhole part was based off a theory that blackhole puts you into the 4th dimension. Which everyone knows the 4th dimension can go through time forwards and backward.
Never heard of her. She's amazing! I was going to watch a few minutes and when the 27 min was over I was like "that's it?" Facinating. Please invite her to do more of these.
“The range safety guys do have this capability..” to blow up the ISS or spacecraft? That’s certainly interesting. Oh well guess I’ll be lost in Wikipedia or whatever for next couple hours.. Agreed. She’s amazing. Incredibly intelligent and incredibly brave person.
I love how she praises sci-fi as a way for the human species to explore (and sometimes predict!) future technologies and triumphs. This scientist supports a liberal arts education.
@@notleviathan855 Liberal arts is a field of study based on rational thinking, and it includes the areas of humanities, social and physical sciences, and mathematics. it's not an art degree.
@@rock-uu7qr Liberal arts doesn't mean what you think it means, to you the name would be "conservative sciences". It is the most prestigious kind of education. It isn't the same thing as a social science degree. There is nothing progressive or democrat about liberal art in this context, purely liberal, meaning they guarantee a free speech zone - no banning biology studies that demonstrate differences between men and women, no banning speech as racist sexist, hatred, ANYTHING GOES in a liberal arts university, proven by the Socratic method, no matter how savoury or unsavoury the truth.... Not many of those left.
I just want to sit and listen to this woman talk about everything she did. She is absolutely amazing and seems really humble about all of her amazing experiences. I want to ask her so many things!
I'm quite surprised that she had no qualms with the idea of sending drill-men (or whatever their proper title might be) into space. I recall Ben Affleck being baffled by the plot of the movie and asked Bay "how hard can it be for astronauts to push a button to drill?". Bay told Affleck to shut up ;)
@@aiwash2766 I mean, it's easy to be authentic when you're partnered with the US Military to do questionable recruitment advertising through your films.
She's one of my favorite guests on here. A lot experts assume films exaggerate or alter things out of ignorance, but she gives them the benefit of the doubt without getting bogged down in pseudo film critic logic and then helpfully explains what the truth is in the scene and what the difference is in reality. She also understands that the circumstances these characters find them in are so extraordinarily specific and rare that it's simply what's required of fiction.
I love that she took into consideration the amount of difficulty and effort it takes to portray these scenes in the first place. I was joyed she still appreciated the certain details the Interstellar docking scene had despite it being an 'extreme' example/portrayal of a space emergency.
She is not a physicist - she can not answer a question like that. Hollywoods version with stars drawing lines on the sky is not accurate. The reality is unfortunately boring. The only thing you would see is a single point of light in the direction of motion, as you approach the speed of light. That is independent of what is around you - a star field or like in this old animation, a dessert: ruclips.net/video/JQnHTKZBTI4/видео.html
There's another instance of her on the channel reviewing other movies, one of which is The Martian. They reused some footage between the two videos, though.
I appreciate that she didnt make this a pure movie critique of everything wrong in a scene, but instead observed and then offered how it could be improved or turned it into a teaching moment about the real life counterpart.
A martial arts expert breaks down martial arts scenes. I remember doing this with my old instructor often. It was a lot of fun discussing how absolutely impractical the techniques and choreography was. It's partly because the flashy moves are often much weaker, and cause you to become much more vulnerable (you open yourself up to counters etc more).
@@AlexFlockhart You're crazy. He is hands down, one of the smartest most compelling filmmakers in the last couple of decades. He's in a league of his own. The Dark Knight trilogy (best Batmans ever) Inception, Interstellar, Memento, The Prestige. You must mean Jar Jar Abrams who should quit writing anything ever, and go sit on his mystery box. He has flashy, fast paced, fun stories, that are horrifically, terribly, ruinously written.
Not exactly. She said someone in mission control could do it. So it's not technically a SELF-destruct button. It's more of a "Quick, Destroy our Employees" button.
absolutely, and its been used several times on unmanned missions when the rocket goes out of control. the one time it was used on a manned mission is when the Space Shuttle Challenger blew up the solid rocket boosters (the long white ones) on each side of the external tank survived and flew out of control (you can see this in the explosion videos and the two arc away) and after about 30-45 seconds they became a threat so they were commanded to self destruct.
I love her sarcasm :p and she seems so chill and confident all time (wich is not surprising for an astronaut) but it's still amazing to watch. Thanks for the video c:
@@TobeEvans She's never been in a planetary atmosphere that isn't Earth, so she doesn't have the necessary knowledge to talk about it. I have respect for that.
Tobe Evans she probably knows. We have done plenty of experiments with biological specimens in vacuum (or near vacuum like mars) and their eyes and tongues do not expand this way. In fact you can survive in a vacuum a surprisingly long time (30 sec to 2min depending on a lot of factors). The biggest immediate threat is if you hold your breath instead of immediately exhaling, because you could burst a lung. I’m sure she had to learn about it during her training, because knowing what to expect could save your life in an emergency. My guess is she commented on it, but the editor decided to cut it out, because they thought it was too obvious or less interesting.
@@techspider7486 This comment is overrated. 180 Likes? That's not underrated. What do you consider underrated anyway? There's been a surge of "this comment is underrated" for comments that have way too many likes on youtube lately.
7:09 "On the space station, and then even on the space shuttle before, we had this robot arm -- big, white, long crane-looking thing." It's called the CanadArm! It's literally Canada's only contribution to international space technology. GAH! Respect our few but essential contributions to space, dammit.
Wayward Mind lol it’s weird how an astronaut such as her self would not know what that is... listen to her butcher words an astronaut should not... clearly an actor
4:56 Forget spacewalkers. Spinning off like that is one of MY (albeit irrational) greatest fears and I'm not likely to ever get to set foot into space.
Within seconds of hearing the Interstellar bgm, I had tears, I always do. There's something divine in that music that I think even Hans zimmer can't explain.
As Matt Damon pointed out in the commentary for Armageddon: Why teach oil drillers to be astronauts? Wouldn’t it be easier to teach astronauts to drill? Michael Bay told him to shut up.
@@tristanbackup2536 Astronauts working out how oil drilling works in twelve days is way more plausible than oil drillers undergoing astronaut training in twelve days.
Jemuel Mongado they only had to learn basics, as to the person drilling would have to learn every bit. It was more of a physical preparation more than “astronaut training”.
I love she she has so much nostalgia for how beautiful the view in space was. The way she talks about it is like how I'd talk about beautiful beaches kind of
I like how she appreciates the art in these movies and doesn't ridicule, gets mad, or criticize the scenes. She simply smiles when see something not realistic.
nasa is fake
The crazy thing is, she didn't ridicule a single thing about Armageddon. That was a nice surprise. I like this series by Wired, because they seem to pick experts that are usually movie fans themselves.
Unlike Neil Degrasse Tyson? Don't get me wrong, I love the guy.
lmao
ITS MORE CAUSE SHE HAS BEEN IN THE EXACT SITUATION AS THOSE ACTORS IN THE MOVIES WITH NO DIFFERENCE AS TO WHAT SHE ACTUALLY DID IN REALITY AS WELL... ALL GREEN SCREENS AND ALL. : D
Its honestly nuts how good and interesting the people WIRED gets are.
Nickolai agreed!!!!
Yes! I mean people actually appreciate something like WIRED and NatGeo, i thought people have gone mad
The true pros!
It's not ''nuts'', it's DELIBERATE aka the intended goal.
@@cici_julja You thought you were the only ''smart'' and ''special'' one and made a hige discovery that other people also love smart thigns? Awww.
She’s a whole astronaut and just chilling acting like it’s nothing we love a humble queen
Do we?
Master Samurai We do. 🥳
Because space isn’t real
Yeah, she's a Queen, what a badass lady.
@Samuel Díez
lol howdy.
This lady is so humble in the way she speaks, without showing that she's really that great. I don't understand how she can maintain that level of humility with all her achievements, it's amazing!
Exactly my thought, she's really a badass lady
I think its because you know you are a part of a team and there were thousands of people working so you could become an astronaut so you want to appreciate their effort.
@@werrkowalski2985 Yeah, that's kinda true. But let's also remember how many years of dedication they put their individual efforts leading to that time in space, whether health-wise, fitness and accumulating knowledge of problem solving everything about anything in space. That is surely more commendable, right?
I find her attractive. She's beautiful inside out
@S Anderson I disagree here because being balanced and working well under pressure is among the reasons that make most people proud and give them a feeling of deep pleasure or satisfaction as a result of their own achievements. The fact that this lady does not show this despite her over achievements is extremely rare and very commendable. Almost an impossibility for many with such skills.
These technique critiques are the best. I will/do watch every one of them.
Same
So we all have something in common
True
Imagine flat eathers reacting to this video lol.
She's a bit wrong here tho. When talking Spaceballs - if you would travel near speed of light all "stars" would be visible as bringht lines. Some physicists talked about it
She seems like a really down to earth person, for an astronaut...
@@rajch2000 It was a pun, bro!
Omg I love ur joke hahahahaha inside joke pun
She talks like every single person I know that's doing the best they can at their job like that's the normal thing to do.
hahhh! noice
I came for angry responses that missed the joke.
Wasn't as good as I hoped
2/6
Edit: for some reason a non angry commenter deleted their comment
i find it so genuinly amazing that this lady has been all the way into actual space, done god knows what complicated smart stuff while in space, come hurtling down back to earth and is here to talk about space scenes casually. What an absolute legend!!!
People in 2100 will look at this comment and laugh
@@optimusprime5446 yes they will laugh, at how stupid we are were at falling for the fake space lie
@@digginaustin bruh
@@digginaustin Why are all u flat earthers drawn to space vids? I thought you hated space...
"When I was outside" she says when referring to be in space.... How casual can you get?
That interstellar scene with that "no time for caution" soundtrack is just amazing.
TARS, you might have to take the controls. That was all real footage, though.
Just so amazing.
The one thing that always strikes me when I listen to astronauts, is just how laidback, calm and intelligent they are. Astronauts like Chris Hadfield, Tim Peak and this fabulous astronaut Nicole Stott, they just always come across so well when speaking, a joy to listen to!
You have to have perfect social skills as an astronaut because they will never allow anyone with signs of psychotic or flawed mental bursts in a serious position just like any very important (lives at stake) career
@@mwwwww648 But who would "they" be in that case? Therein lies the problem.
This is the reason why I disliked "Gravity". I was so disappointed that Sandra Bullock's character was so panicky and crying all the time.
I had expected an astronaut to keep her cool even in dangerous situations.
@@mwwwww648 "they" is the voters. We have the ability to prevent that. For some reason, we instead regularly choose these types to lead us. What does that say?
I met a molecular biologist that struck me the same way. I think if you have a job that really challenges you and stimulates your intellect it just leaves you a happier, more relaxed person.
"Yeah you can cry in space, you can cry anywhere." when she said that i felt it, good to know i can cry on mars too
You cant cry on Venus =(
@@AceKitties little girls' stupidity is heigh on Venus as well as on earth and on RUclips and the list goes on and on .... forever and ever 😭😭😢😢
i love how she was like "oh don't worry you'll suffocate before your body liquids all completely boil and you freeze"
Yep. You have about 10-15 seconds before you pass out.
Tbh I find that reassuring. I'd far rather die of suffocation than the other.
shrinerspark I’d rather live myself 😂
@@shrinerspark I'd rather black out and then suffocate and then boil and freeze
@@shrinerspark Suffocating is a terrible way to go. Fortunately people pass out in a minute or so.
Honestly, I just came for review of “Interstellar”.
13:44
same here
Same thats the best movie EVER
Well... You've lost great content
@@AtomicPunkBR indeed!
Honestly same. Interstellar was the best movie for me about space
MORE VIDEOS WITH THIS WOMAN!!! She's wonderful to listen to and terribly fascinating.
CannaClarawrr did you see our “Tech Support” with Nicole? Check it out: ruclips.net/video/yX1KsPh_D2Q/видео.html
She's also on One Strange Rock
She didn't even understand the first two things presented to her. The first being would the body react like that, not would the helmet crack. And the second being jetpacks and she said no they aren't that large, but in the clip they presented they showed the jet pack is just part of that large pack.
MisterWealth you clearly didn’t listen to everything she said then. 1) she said the helmet likely wouldn’t crack like that, which is a fair assessment of the movie. So that’s what she decided to focus on because it was funny. 2) she noted that they had jet packs but that astronauts wouldn’t be using them to just fly around. They only used them in dire situations. The jet pack situation was about space walks and she took note of the situations in that movie that would be highly unlikely, like using the jet packs like that.
I'd watch every single one.
She is delightful :) Really enjoyed her commentary
disliked the video bc she's a woman. Obviously another SJW pr move to put her instead of any male astronauts even though there are 10 times as many. What are the odds?
@@AP-qs2gx geez, who hurt u?
@@amanuel221 People who pick woman purposefully in 1 to 10 ratio must have been hurt . Your comment makes no sense.
To all the butthurt men complaining about how this was a woman: Did you stop to think that maybe this woman was the only astronaut 1) available, 2) personable/good-humored, and 3) good at explaining difficult concepts to laypeople?
@@elenaatkinson1622 1) 10 percent chance with this so, No. . 2) I agree with that. 3) I agree with that. I'm not butthurt with her, you're butthurt with meritocracy because you pick her against meritocracy.
I love how she compliments on everything. She finds the humour funny and gently elaborates on what actually would happen without insulting the movie. Amazing person.
She was just so overall pleasant and I thoroughly enjoyed her critique. More of her reviews please!
I’d like to see a professional diver evaluate diving scenes. There’s so many great movies with diving scenes where things go wrong and they have to get out of it, and there’s plenty of movies that take those things to extremes as well!
They did that!
You enjoy that. My thalassophobic self will stay right here. 😰
I love how she says "That would be a bad day" when what she means is "Yeah, you would die in a truly horrible fashion." Astronauts all seem so calm.
Part of their job.
Matt Damon: so u gonna ignore me flying like ironman in the martian ???
yeah like i was waiting for that i'm bummed that they didn't show it
Part 2? 🤞🏿
I clicked on this video only hoping to see Interstellar and The Martian but they only did one 😔
I know right, i mainly just wanted to see interstellar and the Martian, they covered a tiny little bit of interstellar but didn't even mention the Martian. Oh well, maybe next time.....
It was probably one of the more accurate movies so far yet it wasn't mentioned. Bummer.
NASA and Wired are really coming out with content that's exciting everyone about Space. I feel like I'm a bystander in some space race era space technology boom thing stuff
"Space technology boom thing stuff"
I felt that.
Ok boomer
Lol....they "landed" on the moon in 69....and NO ONE has been back or even tried since. And you think that you live in a space race boom? Wonder what the folks back in 69 thought. Stop being gullible and use w.e is left of your brain.
@@reesecollins482 69 nice
@@alalalala57 So well put!
Interviewer: "What is your profession?"
Some person in NASA: "I track the movement of a 30cm in diameter debris in space"
More like 5cm
@@AditiSingh-ie6fy it's funny suck it
Well, the right answer is:
"What is your professsion?!
"AAOOH... AOOOH... AOOH!!!"
"See? I brought more astronauts than you did..."
The Air Force has, or had, that job. They might pass that off to Space Force now.
Just came here to make sure that she likes interstellar
same
x2
Fuckboys !
Same!!!
Ahmad Alhuwaish Yessssss same!!
"And here's me in space lmao" 0:09
- Every astronaut ever
lol they earned it
nasa is fake
Who wouldn’t?
@@courtney-ray "Ma'am, you were speeding and ran three red lights."
"Here's me in space."
"Have a nice day ma'am."
@@wickedhouston5538 aah poor guy going to every comment looking for attention which no one is giving...
Here let me help
*ATTENTION*
be happy now
There’s something hypnotic about hearing someone talk about an area they have this much expertise
Former US president reacts to US president scenes in movies
omg yes
Thats actually a really good idea! I want to see that! Q.
@Pluralizes Everythings Obama might be up for it, he did between two ferns before. Q.
how about Former US president reacts to current US president scenes on tv
elck3 stop trying to kill the fun. Nobody here was being political. Go away.
I'll ask it again: PLEASE BRING AN OBGYN FOR SILLY DELIVERY SCENES IN MOVIES!
Mama Doctor Jones will be great!
That..... would actually be really interesting, I want to see this
Or midwives
I would loveeee
Ganychan yess!! Haha
I’m so glad she said that the scene where Sandra Bullock’s character ignores NASA’s command to abort bothers her. When that movie came out, I felt like I was the only person that absolutely hated it. It felt like some idiot Hollywood writer said, “Hmm, how can I create drama? I know, lets take the best trained humans in history, have them ignore every bit of training they have ever had, panic uncontrollably, and survive pretty much by pure luck!”. Hated Gravity!!!
Her constant panick and screaming is annoying AF!
I don’t think her character was an astronaut, she was like a mildly trained doctor or something. The movie was awful but seeing it in theaters was awesome, it’s a beautiful movie.
J. Elizabeth Yeah, have to agree with that statement. It is visually stunning!
Same! I can't watch it. The visuals are gorgeous, but I get too frustrated at that, and of course it's the woman who is the one that does that (despite the fact that the most experienced astronaut right now is a bloody woman!)
She explained everything really simple and easy to understand.
13:44 For Interstellar
Thank you
Thank you
Ty.
The only movie that matters here lol... No disrespect to 2001.
ma man u knew exactly what i came for
Interstellar is so amazing. I'm still sad I didn't see it in the cinema.
I'm not even the biggest fan of the movie overall, but man those visuals were absolutely breathtaking on the big screen.
@@DerMoerpler the soundtrack too
@@disgruntled.pelican5324 That too. The docking scene had me on the edge of my seat for every second and the music was a big part of that.
@@DerMoerpler yeahh same!!
That was one of my first amazing experiences in a theatre that made me fall in love with film. Saw it opening day with two friends when I was 16.
That docking scene in Interstellar, with the soundtrack and everything, is quite honestly one of the greatest movie/film scenes of all time.
what i expected: “haha look how ridiculous all these sci fi movies are”
what i got: “you would feel the liquids in your body boil out through your skin”
That was scary AF! Her description was way more scary than total recall...
nasa is fake
She didn't say that. Blood and/or water will NOT boil through your skin. You heard wrong. She said that bodily fluids already exposed to the vacuum of space (ie, saliva and whatever fluid that's on your eyes) will evaporate.. Saliva doesn't come through your skin.
all yall “well actually” motherfuckers 😂😂 i know bruh i watched the video
its a joke
@@Nghilifa Liquids will evaporate under your skin though, causing swelling. It won't burst like the movies depicted because your skin can stretch but you'd basically look and be like a swollen balloon. Blood is an exception to this though since your blood pressure is automatically regulated by your body.
Interstellar is one of the best movies of all time, cinematography, sound and editing. Now I know they also perfectly simulated what would happen in outer space in those situations. Christopher Nolan is a genius who brings other geniuses around him to make eternal masterpieces. Also, I appreciate Nicole's way of explaining complex concepts in such a simple way.
Not only that but the visual representation of a black hole is now the most scientifically accurate visualization of a black hole. They use real physic equations to simulate it, thought it was a bug at first but soon realize that it was what a black hole would look like with what we understand about physic. They even wrote scientific papers on the subject.
🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼
It was too emotional for me. I've never been so emotionally exhausted after a movie before.
MaggotDiggo1 You ever seen Schindler’s list?
Easily one of my favorite movies as well. And this just made me love it more.
For convenience:
00:15 - Cracking helmets - Total Recall (1990)
01:31 - Spacewalk - Gravity (2013)
05:20 - Ludicrous speed - Spaceballs (1987)
06:54 - Robotic arm on the ISS - Life (2017)
08:57 - Astronaut training - First Man (2018)
10:27 - Training montage - Armageddon (1998)
12:58 - Removing helmet in space - Mission to Mars (2000)
13:43 - Docking a spacecraft - Interstellar (2014)
16:50 - AI on spaceships - 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
17:51 - Sharing oxygen in a spacesuit - Rocketman (1997)
19:17 - Airlock - Event Horizon (1997)
21:33 - Self-destruct button - Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
23:05 - G-Force training - Space Cowboys (2000)
24:03 - Getting sucked into space - Alien: Resurrection (1997)
25:16 - Crying in space - Gravity (2013)
She explained everything really simple and easy to understand.
Yet flatards still doesn't get it.
hearing this woman talk so nonchalantly about the dangers of working in space gives me nothing but respect to her :D
It's like a lot of dangerous careers. Inside, you know the risks, and you do take those seriously (unless you're an idiot), but you also need to be able to get past that and not be consumed by anxiety etc. Personally, I approach it as what your priorities are, as well as confidence in yourself and your team. I've done some extremely dangerous things, and I feel like I always remind myself of the dangers even if I tried to play it safe (the risk of car crash etc.).
The fact they have a "self destruct" sequence in ground control TERRIFIES ME HOLY WHAT. I mean, makes sense, but still "guys you're off course one degree, sorry, gotta boom ya"
Even she admit that 'Interstellar' was perfection.
It was necessary
@@LuisSierra42 of course
Interstellar is not perfect.
@@proto-geek248 actually it is
@@S_2_7 Well, for one thing, the protagonist travels to another galaxy. That's not interstellar, that's Intergalactic.
13:44 for my interstellar fans
I love how she was able to enjoy the crazier representation of some of these and have a laugh. She looked at the possibilities and also talked about how they did it in such a way to for the viewer to understand even if it won't realistically happen (such as the passing the gas scene). In other videos like this, some just kinda took it a bit too seriously.
I think we have this stereotypes that experts don't appreciate movies about their field because they would be nitpicking. This series of videos has really taught me that people will enjoy movies for being movies even when they're not realistic. Also, really knowledgeable and intelligent people should all be this humble. Really cool woman.
They should do an interpreter breaking down interpretation scenes
Yeah was going to say "they did that!" But it may have been a different channel and I don't remember which one it was lol.
Elias J. And the interpreter can interpret someone interpreting this video in a foreign language.
They did this already: ruclips.net/video/twCpijr_GeQ/видео.html
or interrogator/detective breaking down interrogation scenes
Just watch mindhunter, it's pretty accurate
All I cared was Interstellar being accurate. Did not disappoint
@SuperPunch76 I hope you aren't talking about the accuracy of the fictional part.
SuperPunch76 the whole movie was pretty accurate when it came to the space scenes according to other NASA astronauts that have reviewed those sequences.
Interstellar as a whole is fairly accurate. Nolan had physicists and other scientists overseeing it to make it as accurate as he could. Obviously there were some imaginative liberties taken during certain certain scenes like falling into the black hole. Nobody knows what’s inside a black hole, so at that point it’s free range to do whatever you want.
@SuperPunch76 Actually most experts stated ALOT of the movie was very accurate. The blackhole part was based off a theory that blackhole puts you into the 4th dimension. Which everyone knows the 4th dimension can go through time forwards and backward.
@@Darkangel9036 "everyone knows" not a single person on the planet knows
hoping to see more of this very humble astronaut. really love the way shes commenting and explaining on the scenes. such an inspiration
Never heard of her. She's amazing! I was going to watch a few minutes and when the 27 min was over I was like "that's it?" Facinating. Please invite her to do more of these.
I detect no lies. Facts.
“The range safety guys do have this capability..” to blow up the ISS or spacecraft?
That’s certainly interesting. Oh well guess I’ll be lost in Wikipedia or whatever for next couple hours..
Agreed. She’s amazing. Incredibly intelligent and incredibly brave person.
Yep, 27 minutes just passed, not a single seconds get bored
I love how she praises sci-fi as a way for the human species to explore (and sometimes predict!) future technologies and triumphs. This scientist supports a liberal arts education.
Liberal arts lmao best thing you are gonna get is a full time job at subway
@@rock-uu7qr or a job in investment banking.
@@notleviathan855 Liberal arts is a field of study based on rational thinking, and it includes the areas of humanities, social and physical sciences, and mathematics.
it's not an art degree.
@@notleviathan855 Ssssshhhhhhh, Go back to running people over in your trolley.
@@rock-uu7qr Liberal arts doesn't mean what you think it means, to you the name would be "conservative sciences". It is the most prestigious kind of education. It isn't the same thing as a social science degree.
There is nothing progressive or democrat about liberal art in this context, purely liberal, meaning they guarantee a free speech zone - no banning biology studies that demonstrate differences between men and women, no banning speech as racist sexist, hatred, ANYTHING GOES in a liberal arts university, proven by the Socratic method, no matter how savoury or unsavoury the truth.... Not many of those left.
Any Canadian when she is talking about the "Robotic Arm" at 7:13 is yelling at their screen "It's called the Canadarm!".
Yanks call it the AMERIGRAB.
you are correct haha I exclaimed "why isn't she calling it by its real name?!!"
@@FusionC6 does it grab things by the snatch?
I thought it was just me haha! Totally called me out...
Not a Canadian, but I said this too...
Came for the appreciation of interstellar . Got enough .
Haha same i just skipped over to Interstellar's scene. Beautiful movie.
same
Sammmmmmme. Favorite movie and soundtrack of all time.
@@MalASMR same here . Christopher Nolan and Hans Zimmer best pair of talents !
jinesh jain 100% exactly the same
This woman combines knowledge with practical experience brilliantly. She was smart, patient and great to watch
"You can cry pretty much anywhere" that hit deep
😂
I was looking for this comment
*Come on, TARS!*
Was waiting for “The Martian”
An astronaut said about that one that the sand storms in mars aren't that strong, they are more like a soft flow of air.
That's_correct now you’ve confused me. It sounds like you just called a soft flow of air relatively strong?
@@marieelisa1 yeah they said the atmospheric pressure wouldn't be enough for even a strong storm to knock things around like that.
We can just get excited for the next video she does!
Neil deGrasse Tyson did a whole video on The Martian
I just want to sit and listen to this woman talk about everything she did. She is absolutely amazing and seems really humble about all of her amazing experiences. I want to ask her so many things!
I would NEVER had guessed that Armageddon was accurate on so many points.
Yep right up until they launched its pretty accurate. (Ignoring the 7 day astronaut crash course or whatever lol)
chribrandt Micheal bay loves authenticity, people love to crap on him and rightfully so but he does some things extremely well
I'm quite surprised that she had no qualms with the idea of sending drill-men (or whatever their proper title might be) into space. I recall Ben Affleck being baffled by the plot of the movie and asked Bay "how hard can it be for astronauts to push a button to drill?".
Bay told Affleck to shut up ;)
@@aiwash2766 I mean, it's easy to be authentic when you're partnered with the US Military to do questionable recruitment advertising through your films.
Since when can an C-130 attack anything?
I really enjoyed this one. Please invite her or other astronauts again, it was so interesting!
I love how understated her "that's gonna be a bad day" is. So chill. It is what it is.
Can you guys do an episode where a psychologist watches "YOU" on Netflix.
OOOUUUU
Or criminal minds
yeahhh good idea
Na breaking bad , the blacklist
Ooh that would be a good one
I like her, you should bring her back more.
She's one of my favorite guests on here. A lot experts assume films exaggerate or alter things out of ignorance, but she gives them the benefit of the doubt without getting bogged down in pseudo film critic logic and then helpfully explains what the truth is in the scene and what the difference is in reality. She also understands that the circumstances these characters find them in are so extraordinarily specific and rare that it's simply what's required of fiction.
"you can cry pretty much anywhere" tell me about it : P
You can't cry on Krypton...not anymore...
ʕっ•ᴥ•ʔっ
13:59 Alright, alright, alright
I love that she took into consideration the amount of difficulty and effort it takes to portray these scenes in the first place. I was joyed she still appreciated the certain details the Interstellar docking scene had despite it being an 'extreme' example/portrayal of a space emergency.
She has a really nice, soothing voice.
🤨🤨
She skipped right over plaid speed, I need to know if that shit's real.
She is not a physicist - she can not answer a question like that. Hollywoods version with stars drawing lines on the sky is not accurate. The reality is unfortunately boring. The only thing you would see is a single point of light in the direction of motion, as you approach the speed of light. That is independent of what is around you - a star field or like in this old animation, a dessert: ruclips.net/video/JQnHTKZBTI4/видео.html
@@hpekristiansen lmao it was a joke.... bet you're fun at parties
@@johnreinhardt3772 I bet you are super rude.
@hpekristiansen *_pssst_* Many kinds of dessert will not last long in a desert.
@@kneau :)
her: "we did that when I was outside."
outside: *is literally ,outer space*
She is wonderful. You can tell that shes a delight and would be interesting to chat to.
*WIRED LOWKEY BECOMING THE BEST CHANNEL ON RUclips*
They missed out on one great movie: The martian, I would've loved to hear her thoughts on that
Redfield actually speculated on how the whole puncture in the glove thing was kinda realistic
There's another instance of her on the channel reviewing other movies, one of which is The Martian. They reused some footage between the two videos, though.
"Eeeah-ahhhrgh! Yeeaaahhargherhg, gargharagharahh!" -- Arnold Schwarzenegger, Total Recall.
Reading this made me think of my Welsh friend when he speaks lol
I appreciate that she didnt make this a pure movie critique of everything wrong in a scene, but instead observed and then offered how it could be improved or turned it into a teaching moment about the real life counterpart.
im a simple man
when i see Interstellar content
i click
A martial arts expert breaks down martial arts scenes.
I remember doing this with my old instructor often. It was a lot of fun discussing how absolutely impractical the techniques and choreography was. It's partly because the flashy moves are often much weaker, and cause you to become much more vulnerable (you open yourself up to counters etc more).
We all loved interstellar for the soundtracks. Let’s be honest here
Cinematography and practical effects were great too. Nolan just needs to hand off the writing to someone else.
The writing was incredible as well, haven’t you seen how many people it made cry their eyes out?
@@eliotcole663 I didn't cry, but I can say it has good writing in a way. I enjoy the lines actually.
@@AlexFlockhart You're crazy. He is hands down, one of the smartest most compelling filmmakers in the last couple of decades. He's in a league of his own. The Dark Knight trilogy (best Batmans ever) Inception, Interstellar, Memento, The Prestige.
You must mean Jar Jar Abrams who should quit writing anything ever, and go sit on his mystery box. He has flashy, fast paced, fun stories, that are horrifically, terribly, ruinously written.
Nicola Calambur Hans Zimmer did the soundtrack for interstellar
We should see more smart people on youtube like her.
I like how she genuinely enjoys the clips, even the ones that are clearly ridiculous like Spaceballs.
21:49 yo did she straight up say that there's a real life "Self-Destruct" button?
Yep
Yeah well, every rocket has it...
Not exactly. She said someone in mission control could do it. So it's not technically a SELF-destruct button. It's more of a "Quick, Destroy our Employees" button.
absolutely, and its been used several times on unmanned missions when the rocket goes out of control. the one time it was used on a manned mission is when the Space Shuttle Challenger blew up the solid rocket boosters (the long white ones) on each side of the external tank survived and flew out of control (you can see this in the explosion videos and the two arc away) and after about 30-45 seconds they became a threat so they were commanded to self destruct.
@@canyonblue737-8 wtf are you high?
I think she's really cool. I wanna see more of her on here.
I love her sarcasm :p and she seems so chill and confident all time (wich is not surprising for an astronaut) but it's still amazing to watch. Thanks for the video c:
I love listening to this astronaut speak! She's one of my inspirations.
Me: wow, sounds like being an astronaut is really cool. I wish I could try some of that training!
Also me: _gets sick on an elevator_
Facts.
i like how she doesn’t just go “that is absolutely unrealistic” and just says that the movies are doing it for visual reference
I would like to see her getting over "The Expanse" Series! That would be so great!
Would loved to have seen her talk about The Expanse.
ooooh maybe pt. 2
we need this!
We really do
this series has so many scenes to talk about
I'm an aspiring astronaut, and they provide a lot of valuable information in this interview! Thanks so much for sharing!
I feel like total recall's critique should be less about helmet durability and more about eye bulging, but hey, to each their own.
I mean she probably doesn’t know what would happen if you lost your helmet on a different planet like this.
@@TobeEvans She's never been in a planetary atmosphere that isn't Earth, so she doesn't have the necessary knowledge to talk about it. I have respect for that.
shrinerspark thank you, I’m not great with words lol. You expressed what I was thinking better than I did. 😂
Tobe Evans she probably knows. We have done plenty of experiments with biological specimens in vacuum (or near vacuum like mars) and their eyes and tongues do not expand this way. In fact you can survive in a vacuum a surprisingly long time (30 sec to 2min depending on a lot of factors). The biggest immediate threat is if you hold your breath instead of immediately exhaling, because you could burst a lung. I’m sure she had to learn about it during her training, because knowing what to expect could save your life in an emergency. My guess is she commented on it, but the editor decided to cut it out, because they thought it was too obvious or less interesting.
We all know in the future the ships AI will be Siri or Alexa.
Pilot: Siri, engage retro boosters
Siri: playing endgame roosters
This comment is underrated.
lmao this is gold
Lol
lol
@@techspider7486 This comment is overrated. 180 Likes? That's not underrated. What do you consider underrated anyway? There's been a surge of "this comment is underrated" for comments that have way too many likes on youtube lately.
Very few people can truly have her perspective on these experiences. Impressive.
7:09 "On the space station, and then even on the space shuttle before, we had this robot arm -- big, white, long crane-looking thing." It's called the CanadArm! It's literally Canada's only contribution to international space technology. GAH! Respect our few but essential contributions to space, dammit.
Don't forget Chris Hadfield. Man is a Canadian national treasure. As an American, he's one of my favorite Canadians!
Chris Hadfield, man! Man's a global tresure
I was literally thinking the exact thing lol
khan kirk it might have just been cut out by editors
Wayward Mind lol it’s weird how an astronaut such as her self would not know what that is... listen to her butcher words an astronaut should not... clearly an actor
Wired: Can you cry in space?
Nicole: Oh there's definitely crying in space.
astronaut mood
‘you can cry in space, you can cry almost anywhere’ big mood
It's so great listening to actually articulate people on youtube
4:56 Forget spacewalkers. Spinning off like that is one of MY (albeit irrational) greatest fears and I'm not likely to ever get to set foot into space.
Within seconds of hearing the Interstellar bgm, I had tears, I always do. There's something divine in that music that I think even Hans zimmer can't explain.
never heard the interstellar bgm, but every hans Zimmer soundtrack I've ever heard is absolutely and among my favorite film composers
I agree!
My vote for the best and most enjoyable video of the year! Astronaut Stott should most definitely have her own NASA science channel.
Interstellar has one of the best soundtracks of any movie
Sci-fi turning into sci-fact, I loved that lol
This is the first NASA astronaut I've ever seen smiles the brightest.
It's always cool in these videos when the movie gets it totally right and it impresses the critiquer
As Matt Damon pointed out in the commentary for Armageddon: Why teach oil drillers to be astronauts? Wouldn’t it be easier to teach astronauts to drill? Michael Bay told him to shut up.
CrazyPangolinLady It was Ben Affleck. ;)
In 12 days? Easier to send people who know what thier doing.
@@tristanbackup2536 Astronauts working out how oil drilling works in twelve days is way more plausible than oil drillers undergoing astronaut training in twelve days.
Well as was pointed out in the video they probably wouldn't need all the training, which is true.
Jemuel Mongado they only had to learn basics, as to the person drilling would have to learn every bit. It was more of a physical preparation more than “astronaut training”.
I love she she has so much nostalgia for how beautiful the view in space was. The way she talks about it is like how I'd talk about beautiful beaches kind of
This was really cool and she’s amazing. I want my daughter to see this.
I hope it inspires her to become an astronaut or engineer!
@@DingDingTheRUclipsBuddy absolutely!
Hopefully some sons see this too and recognize that badasses who venture forth into the void can be anyone!
Ok Boomer
@Ben Garcia Exactly, I hate it when professions like this are represented by Galadriel or Arwen instead of smart, well-educated men like you.
Her mostly deadpan critique of Spaceballs was amazing
I LOVE her. Brilliant, funny, humble... I could listen to her speak about space forever