If you look *Chin Lakes* on _Google Earth_ where they filmed the cornfield chase, and then time travel back in the historical imagery to 2015 you can see the skid marks from the film truck and Coopers truck on the edge of the cliff. The image was taken August of 2015. There are remnants of the filming all over those hills from the crews setting up for shots and moving equipment. All erased with time now. You can still, just faintly see the marks on the edge of the cliff next to the reservoir 10 years later. I wish somebody could go out there and look at it up close.
So is there some school somewhere teaching all creators to use the same type of irrelevant and stock footage timed for every other word as if you’re afraid we might turn away for a second if you don’t keep slapping us in the face with unnecessary visuals? You’re like carbon copies of each other. There’s nothing unique here, and this gets old and tiring after a while.
That was my initial take too until I read (known as corn in North America and Australia; wheat is often called corn in countries including Britain). British people, like this videomaker like to be quirky.
While the black hole was technically accurate, Gargantua was not. A black hole with the mass of a 100 million suns would have an event horizon that would be larger than the orbit of Mars around the sun. There's no way you could see it in its entirety as you do in the movie, from as close as they are. They're supposed to be near the event horizon (guy falls in) so the black hole would just look like a massive void with occasional plasma or dust flying by. But that wouldn't make for a great cinematic experience.
They never should have been able to fly that close to a a black hole. Also if a planet was orbiting a black hole it's just a matter of time before it to get sucked in.
I would if put interstellar as number 1, greatest film of all time. Recently saw it in i-max when it returned to theatres for 10th anniversary, it was phenomenal, makes me sad that I won’t get to experience it like that again
Korn and no way did the money from the korn fund the movie. They used a farmers field. He got paid for them to tear up his field of korn. There is no telling what the movie guys made up for the making of the movie lore. You know lies about how a actor did something that changed the movie or a director that made me do 100 takes because he believed in me. Ego stuff
I really like Interstellar a lot but Christopher Nolan is easily the most overrated director of our time. I can't think of a single other director who receives so much fanfare when a movie of his comes out only to routinely have that movie be a steaming cinematic turd that nobody wants to watch twice, with rare exceptions (for me it's The Dark Knight and only because of Heath Ledger's performance and Interstellar). The plots for half of his movies are simply nonsense and gibberish that only exist give him permission to film super expensive and complex practical effects (for which I will give him credit... he's shot some cool looking effects).
@@doilysimpkin6972 did you miss in the comments where people are calling this "woke" lol. That's the irony with you people. You just call ANYTHING you don't like "woke". Just stop the crying and complaining sheeessshh 🤣😂
Pretty sure it was corn in the movie, not wheat
i do love the hidden details vids (meaning I know more than you know), and then getting the most basic issue in the movie wrong. 😛
Yeah, those are corn stalks. But please continue..
It was corn 🌽 😮😮
Well actually corn is kinda like wheat. It's just really really big wheat. Right?
@@drop830yes. Corn is wheat.
Guess buddy needs to update his list to “10 things you missed and an obvious 11th that only I missed”. It’s corn…corn!!!!
@@keithwilson2103 lolololol, exactly!
If you look *Chin Lakes* on _Google Earth_ where they filmed the cornfield chase, and then time travel back in the historical imagery to 2015 you can see the skid marks from the film truck and Coopers truck on the edge of the cliff. The image was taken August of 2015. There are remnants of the filming all over those hills from the crews setting up for shots and moving equipment. All erased with time now. You can still, just faintly see the marks on the edge of the cliff next to the reservoir 10 years later. I wish somebody could go out there and look at it up close.
CORN… Wheat is a golden yellow.
CORN was talked about in the first part of movie, then at the end.
Holy fuck THANK YOU
Midwesterner came to comment that it's corn, not wheat... old news though.🌽
"Like the wheat in the dustbowl...the CORN is dying." -Prof. Brand
The whole idea that they would not orbit and survey each planet before landing, defies explanation.
😂😂😂
ngl id really like to see Jonathan Nolan's script made into movies
You lost me at “wheat”
Yeah, I couldn't shake it off too 😂
How does anyone confuse corn for wheat?
So is there some school somewhere teaching all creators to use the same type of irrelevant and stock footage timed for every other word as if you’re afraid we might turn away for a second if you don’t keep slapping us in the face with unnecessary visuals? You’re like carbon copies of each other. There’s nothing unique here, and this gets old and tiring after a while.
"Wheat" word repeated several times at the beginning was used to trigger farmers' comments around the world.
That was my initial take too until I read (known as corn in North America and Australia; wheat is often called corn in countries including Britain). British people, like this videomaker like to be quirky.
Breakdown from, it’s a great series and you’ll have fun breaking it down I bet
What’s with the random manga toon appearing every few minutes?
That seems to be the guy speaking we're hearing, or a depiction of how he perceives himself.
Wow this looks good. I'll have to stop at 3 minutes and just go watch it lmao. I'll brb
That was an amazing movie. Holy. Him seeing his daughter on her deathbed was so sad 😢
Amazing movie. 10/10
I concur one my favorites for sure
*known as corn in North America and Australia; wheat is often called corn in countries including Britain* -Per google
While the black hole was technically accurate, Gargantua was not. A black hole with the mass of a 100 million suns would have an event horizon that would be larger than the orbit of Mars around the sun. There's no way you could see it in its entirety as you do in the movie, from as close as they are. They're supposed to be near the event horizon (guy falls in) so the black hole would just look like a massive void with occasional plasma or dust flying by. But that wouldn't make for a great cinematic experience.
Anyone else think the prequel comic explanation sounded like a Roadman telling a story. "Man said it was pointless..."
Spielberg should adapt the alternate script into a completely new movie.
Someone who missed the obvious fact that it’s corn and not wheat is here to reveal the mysteries of Interstellar 😂
Denis Villeneuve is now my favorite Director. Like, Nolan, he has an amazing catalog of films. My Top 3 are Villeneuve, Nolan, and Tarantino.
that's corn.
They never should have been able to fly that close to a a black hole. Also if a planet was orbiting a black hole it's just a matter of time before it to get sucked in.
Where is that scene at the 5 minute mark from?
Isnt it corn they grow?
Corn......
Nah. I'ma do it my own way.
my brother in christ, this is corn
Did you make this for 12 year old iphone addicts? I can’t watch it.
You could’ve called corn “maize” instead of wheat. How you made a video getting that wrong is odd to me.
I knew all this.
Great movie but the ending was crap coming back in a book shelf.
I would if put interstellar as number 1, greatest film of all time.
Recently saw it in i-max when it returned to theatres for 10th anniversary, it was phenomenal, makes me sad that I won’t get to experience it like that again
Korn and no way did the money from the korn fund the movie. They used a farmers field. He got paid for them to tear up his field of korn. There is no telling what the movie guys made up for the making of the movie lore. You know lies about how a actor did something that changed the movie or a director that made me do 100 takes because he believed in me. Ego stuff
This is wheat, I know wheat
No they leached the soil of all its nutrients. Which caused the dust bowl.
Should have used electrolytes.
@@elle3325 it’s got what plant crave
I really like Interstellar a lot but Christopher Nolan is easily the most overrated director of our time. I can't think of a single other director who receives so much fanfare when a movie of his comes out only to routinely have that movie be a steaming cinematic turd that nobody wants to watch twice, with rare exceptions (for me it's The Dark Knight and only because of Heath Ledger's performance and Interstellar). The plots for half of his movies are simply nonsense and gibberish that only exist give him permission to film super expensive and complex practical effects (for which I will give him credit... he's shot some cool looking effects).
How do you mistake CORN for WHEAT? Did you even watch the movie? 🤡
I love SF movies. And this is probably the most over-rated one ever. Not bad, just over-rated.
corn*
Interstellar ripped off event horizon
Corn.
Probably a rice guy lol
Conservatives would call this movie "woke"
No. We call it brilliant. Just enjoy the movie
Nah. It's not particularly woke. It doesn't sacrifice good storytelling at the alter of identity politics.
@@doilysimpkin6972 did you miss in the comments where people are calling this "woke" lol. That's the irony with you people. You just call ANYTHING you don't like "woke". Just stop the crying and complaining sheeessshh 🤣😂
@@theflash10500 You're just pissed that a Conservative debunked your dumb statement.
@@theflash10500”you people” is exactly how liberals talk 🤣
I would have preferred the ORIGINAL script over what we got😒
Best movie ever . . . . That's subjective. The funniest scene was created by Kevin Smith. ruclips.net/video/xOkI2CmD2D8/видео.htmlsi=hfLPuEwYzg6me5St