Someone calculated how much it has cost the world to save Matt Damon, if you put all his movies together. It's $900 billion. Interstellar was his most expensive rescue, by far.
@@TheTyler701 I looked it up. Fictional Costs of Saving Matt Damon (costs are in 2015 currency) "Courage Under Fire" (Gulf War 1 helicopter rescue): $300k "Saving Private Ryan" (WW2 Europe search party): $100k "Titan AE" (Earth evacuation spaceship): $200B "Syriana" (Middle East private security return flight): $50k "Green Zone" (US Army transport from Middle East): $50k "Elysium" (Space station security deployment and damages): $100m "Interstellar" (Interstellar spaceship): $500B "The Martian" (Mars mission): $200B TOTAL: $900B plus change
One of the craziest things is that on that water planet, because of the time dilation via relativity, the lady that landed there was probably only there for an hour or two, sent out the beacon then got killed by the first wave. They spent years flying in space, and probably only showed up an hour or so after she died, and then encountered the second wave. Blows the mind.
Yup its nuts. She had left 10 years prior, then it took them 2 years to get to Saturn. So 12 years total, every hour in 7 years there so ya she was there less than 2 hours. 🤯 I also love the "ticking" track they added in the background meant to represent time passing. Every tick is 1.25 seconds apart and represents a full day passing on earth.
Nolan brothers had just lost their father when they wrote this script. And Christopher watching his children grow up thought how much faster a child change growing up compared to an adult (a child from 10 to 20 change a lot more than an adult from 40 to 50). So basically this movie was written by a father who was watching his children grow up fast just after losing his father.
Yes, but it's also a bit infuriating. She's going to spend decades thinking about how one of the last things that her father said to her is essentially "it's your fault we didn't say goodbye properly".
I love the soundtrack they added to the water planet. I think I read somewhere that the "ticking" that happens in the background is on purpose. It happens every 1.25 seconds and it's there to represent a full day passing on earth... so crazy.
The ticking sound, while they're on the high-gravity water planet, that's in the background, in the music? Every "tick", every 1.25 seconds, is a day passing on Earth.
Anyone remember the trailer for this movie ?basically have like nothing away, was so interesting, the mystery was incredible. Wish more movies followed suit
I have never seen anyone else make that Plan B/fertilized eggs connection; I can't believe that didn't occur to me when I first saw it. Nice job pointing that out.
The line about millimeters of materials separating them from millions of miles of space reminded me of what McCoy said in the 2009 Star Trek movie. That space is nothing but disease and danger cloacked in darkness and silence. That's outer space in a nutshell
This movie did a great job at visually and audbily describing the passage of time. Each rhythmic "tick" that you hear beginning at 21:02 is equal to every, single day that passes back on earth.
Interstellar is one of my favorite movies... I still remember the day I watched it in the cinema and how much of an impact it made on me. Great reaction, as always 👍
Kipp did the calculations to show what it would be like to cross through the wormhole, it's like stepping into a room. Christopher Nolan thought it looked terrible so they made it more dramatic for the movie.
If that's what the math shows, that it's basically just like stepping into another room, that that's quite anticlimactic. It's just, you go through, and Boom! You're there? Blah. Meh. Words to similar effect.
I saw this in theaters. I have NEVER gotten queasy watching any movie, 3D or not, in my entire life. Interstellar is the ONE exception. Our brains simply cannot comprehend anything higher than three dimensional space, and the way they visualized it here actually made my head hurt. If that's not a testament to how accurate this movie was, scientifically speaking, I don't know what is.
One of my favourite details of the making of the film is the rendering of the black holes (which involved making calculations to bend light, rather than just the usual straight line ray tracing) was used in physics papers by Kip Thorn, one of the science advisors on the film. No university had the resources to try to do those effects (or at least couldn't justify committing the amount of time and money it took to do them)
"Whoa, that guy looks EVIL!!!" Hey now, that's just the way he always looks. Wes Bentley can't help having some of the angriest eyebrows in the business ...
this movie is outstanding btw this blackhole looks etc is as close to real life as we could knew back in the day when movie was made now we know much more
This was one of the best IMAX films I ever saw - was just sat there most of it with my jaw dropped open! I'd love it if they made Tau Zero in a similar style. 💖Maple & Arianna are the best people to watch films with 🙂💖
In terms of g forces, flying into space in a rocket is like going on a world-class roller coaster, except not as intense most of the time (the rocket isn't as intense). You don't need to train your body for that, although to be prepared for anything that might happen, you'd probably want to do it anyway. Mostly you're tested to make sure that you're not particularly susceptible or vulnerable in any way. Lots of people want to go to space, but not many get to, so why choose someone who might pass out or throw up? Note that like I said, roller coasters can be more intense, so it's not that stringent a requirement, but the people in charge still have to check and test you.
The "Klicksound" you hear at the Planet "Numero Uno" (with the "Mountains") means that every single klick is a past day on earth! And Christopher Nolan says, he not wanted Hans to make a Score to his Movie, no he cutted the Movie to his Score! So this is what this bound makes Movies this great!
for those who dont know there is an odd ticking in the background of the water planet and thats supposed to tell you that every tick is a day passing on earth
Guys amazing Info; Look at 21:36 there is a background music which is Tik tak tik tak. Kind of beat.. You know what is that mean? That means; every beat is one day on earth.. you can count.. Hans Zimmer is genious guy.. Wonderful touching.. 👍🧡🧡
I like how this movie portrays environmental decay with different grains going extinct and rough dust storms. It's not big and epic like "Day After Tomorrow"; it's a slow death that makes the planet harsher to live on bit by bit, more like what's happening in real life
@@kato093 Increasing temperatures that are making the US central plains (which have good soil for farming) slightly worse for agriculture, shifting the better growing temperatures northward to where the soil is worse, and therefore reducing our production capacity for food.
I've seen this movie at least 20 times (it somehow gets better every time) and I never noticed the Plan B/fertilized eggs thing until you pointed it out. Mind blown.
Yes, a wormhole would be a sphere, much like how a black hole is also a sphere, I suppose. That's what they look like in our normal (for us) perception of three-dimensional space.
The problems we face everyday, are insignificant to the size of the universe. Are lives are merely water droplets in mist, compared to the age of the universe. We were not meant to live in boxes, working our lives away and never fully enjoying this life we were given. This movie awoke a self awareness in many people and changed many lives, even if some of the science in this move were incorrect or slightly different than what we know.
The spaceflight and landing scenes in this movie kind of remind me of the original _Planet of the Apes_ (1968). You should watch that movie, by the way. It was written by Rod Serling of _Twilight Zone_ fame, and it has an interesting twist at the end.
19:38 Scientists were asked what a black hole in that scenario look like so Nolan could use it for that movie. Before that, this image did not exist, and the way light bends around a black hole, originally created for tha movie, is now being used to display black holes in science and universities.
Fuck yes this movie rules, seeing it in imax was the best theater experience I’ve ever had. Anyway great to see y’all do this movie, really good movie for reactions.
@@spdcrzy too negative, in that when he arrived home to his daughter, who was 98 or something, not a single one of her family even acknowledged him, which was odd and rubbish/unrealistic writing, as he was their grandfather and great grandfather or great great grandfather, and uncle and great uncle etc , even thought he was 30. It was negative and made no sense. Bad writing. he was their family member, and yet they ignored him. Not very welcoming for him, Why?
@@mathematics5573 how is that negative, he returned and his daughter saved humanity and was over 100yrs old and had a massive family of her own now, the family had never met Cooper on their entire lives so of course they are restrained and allow for their mom/grandma to have a nice moment with her father. Parts of the movie are definitely sad but that’s life, the movie end/ on a high note, his daughter gets to see him again and know that he never left her there to die and then he goes off to get brand who found a habitable planet. It’s really not that negative and a lot of stuff in there is very realistic
@@puppetmaster8551 you are allowed you opinion. I'm allowed mine. I have sometimes met distance relations. The family still showed warmth towards them. He wasn't even their distant relative. he was their grandfather and great grandfather, and they ignored him. it was shite. a nice moment. how about a nice few hours or days!
What you need to wrap your brain around is not normal time elapsed, but time dilation: how time is "warped" both by relativistic speeds near that of light, as well as deep "gravity wells" such as being close to a black hole. When Cooper told Murph that they might be the same age, he meant that she would be his age while he will hardly have aged at all. Or she might actually be older than her dad. Yes, this is the way the universe works--not in our normal lives, but under specific extreme conditions like Cooper will encounter and experience. Time moves normally for each person, but while days and weeks went by for Cooper, years and decades went by for Murph. This is the nature of the strange, still poorly understood universe in which we live. By the way, your feet are a tiny bit younger than your head because you probably spent much of your life with your feet closer to the gravity well of the Earth. In normal life on the surface of Earth, this difference in age is so minuscule that it can barely be measured, let alone be enough to matter, but what I just said is an effect of physics that can be calculated, and it is real.
You don't have to train your body to go into space, you just have to be fit and healthy. The reason astronaut training takes years is not to condition the body, it's to teach an astronaut how everything works, like literally _everything_, they have to know how every single system on the craft works because if something goes wrong in space there are no tow-trucks to bring you home. If it breaks then you are the only one who can fix it, so you need to know electronics, mechanics, hydraulics, everything.
Also in regards to the "1 hour equals 7 years" stuff, that is actually factually correct. Gravity affects time since gravitational pull slows down anything in it, because we are standing on a planet we get a bit of time drag (that we don't notice because it's normal to us), and then being close to a big gravity source like the sun adds a lot more drag. This puts us at something like a 2 on the 1 to 10 scale of how time should work and how slow time would be if you were near an enormous black hole. When a spacecraft leaves Earth and travels a few million miles any clocks on board tick faster because they are outside of Earth's gravity, if that spacecraft got close to something big like Jupiter then the internal clocks would tick slower than they would on Earth. Because Gargantua (the blackhole in the movie) has an enormous mass many millions of times greater than our sun it means that time on any planet surrounding it (like the water planet they landed on) would slow down so much to the point that spending one hour there would equal many years on Earth. It's known as relativity, whether you were on Earth, or Jupiter, or near a black hole, you would never notice the time difference because the local time would always be relative to you, but other places in the universe would be experiencing time faster or slower depending on the nearby gravity sources, their sun, their planets, even their moons - the cumulative total of all those gravity sources then determines how fast or slow time passes.
Ehhh, most people have to train to be fit and healthy. If all you do is sit around and study, you're going ti become unhealthy, unfit, etc. Long story short, astronauts exercise, AKA train, they even do so while in space to keep their bodies "healthy and fit"...
Maple, I like asmr too. My favorite asmr'r is "ASMR SHORTBREAD." I believe it's because of her breathtaking scottish accent. . . And her gorgeous cheekbones.
I didn't think any movie would top LOTR for me, but this one became the best movie I have ever seen 🧡. Luckily I went to see it in cinema during release. Always manages to make me very emotional with the mindblowing acting, music and visuals 🥰😭❤️🤯... Reactions like yours reminds me of my own and is why I love watching these reaction videos ☺️.
7:10 Anne Hathaway has always looked cute and adorable. 13:21 I think the word you're looking for is "ethereal". 14:25 I think this is what they came up with when they researched cryogenics and suspended animation. It's a way to keep ice crystals from forming in one's tissues while at the same time lowering their body temperature and slowing their vital functions to just this side of death. You wouldn't breathe but maybe once per day or so, but you would still breathe. 15:55 I've read that some people experience ASMR (Autonomic Sensory Meridian Response) and others just don't, like they don't have the gene for it. No judgement, that's just how it is. NCC-17:01 (LOL): If a wormhole is a spherical hole in space, then it's still a hole. No improper way to enter it, you just go through that glass ball in space and come out the other side at your destination. 17:41 That's just space being bent, not matter. There's nothing actually happening with her hand, just the space it's in. The distortion creates an optical effect, making her hand appear to bend out of shape, when in fact it's the space her hand is in that's bending, and not her hand at all. 18:29 Relativity teaches us that gravity and time are related. The stronger a gravity field becomes, the more it distorts spacetime. Since gravity is a function of mass, and mass becomes infinitely greater as it approaches _c_ (the speed of light in a vacuum), and a black hole's gravity is so strong that light cannot escape it, then clearly time is a function of gravity, since gravity is a function of mass, mathematically speaking. So, the closer an object gets to a strong gravity source, such as a black hole, the more time it takes from the perspective of an observer for the traveling object to approach the black hole, while the traveler will continue to experience time at its normal rate.
I feel like it's not the other person's job to make the person leaving fell better about leaving. Is someone has to walk away, then just walk away. Don't try to guilt the person you're leaving into giving you their blessing. That's utterly selfish.
Someone calculated how much it has cost the world to save Matt Damon, if you put all his movies together. It's $900 billion. Interstellar was his most expensive rescue, by far.
Saving private Ryan Martian interstellar. Missing any ?
@@TheTyler701 I looked it up.
Fictional Costs of Saving Matt Damon
(costs are in 2015 currency)
"Courage Under Fire" (Gulf War 1 helicopter rescue): $300k
"Saving Private Ryan" (WW2 Europe search party): $100k
"Titan AE" (Earth evacuation spaceship): $200B
"Syriana" (Middle East private security return flight): $50k
"Green Zone" (US Army transport from Middle East): $50k
"Elysium" (Space station security deployment and damages): $100m
"Interstellar" (Interstellar spaceship): $500B
"The Martian" (Mars mission): $200B
TOTAL: $900B plus change
They weren't going to rescue him here. We were all supposed to go to him.
@@TheTyler701 Does Good Will Hunting count?
@@TheTyler701 its like Sean bean, but dying instead of getting rescued
One of the craziest things is that on that water planet, because of the time dilation via relativity, the lady that landed there was probably only there for an hour or two, sent out the beacon then got killed by the first wave. They spent years flying in space, and probably only showed up an hour or so after she died, and then encountered the second wave. Blows the mind.
Yup its nuts. She had left 10 years prior, then it took them 2 years to get to Saturn. So 12 years total, every hour in 7 years there so ya she was there less than 2 hours. 🤯
I also love the "ticking" track they added in the background meant to represent time passing. Every tick is 1.25 seconds apart and represents a full day passing on earth.
As a fan of sci-fi, this movie blew me away. As a father, it broke my heart.
I watched it before I was a father and it made me sad, I watched again after becoming a father and it wrecked me for a week.
Nolan brothers had just lost their father when they wrote this script. And Christopher watching his children grow up thought how much faster a child change growing up compared to an adult (a child from 10 to 20 change a lot more than an adult from 40 to 50). So basically this movie was written by a father who was watching his children grow up fast just after losing his father.
@@pinball1970 I totally agree, it’s one of my favorite movies of all time and it is most definitely underrated
Summed up many of my thoughts and emotions about this movie very succinctly and proper.
Same... I'm not a father but it broke my heart regardless.
The soundtrack alone in this movie is a masterpiece. Mr. Zimmer never fails.
This is the movie that made me feel insignificant in the universe. Hard not to feel so small in a universe so big.
@Darkstar thats a great way of looking at it.
@Darkstar size matters 👀
@Darkstar Exactly every single atom, particle, quark makes up the entire universe we live in
Christopher Nolan and Hans Zimmer together are just too legendary and Goated 🐐
ill never get over that wave scene for the first time
One of the best movies ever made!! The score let alone is worth it..
I bought the film early and received a piece (scene/frame) of the actual film as a gift! Super cool
Yet, so underrated at release.
@@ACTUALLYRICH Wait, you mean piece of Interstellar film tape? So cool!
The scene where copp begs murph to not let him leave without making things better Between them must be heartbreaking watching as a parent
Yes, but it's also a bit infuriating. She's going to spend decades thinking about how one of the last things that her father said to her is essentially "it's your fault we didn't say goodbye properly".
@@dougallen9689 never think about that as a kid tho, then it showed you her regretting it last second and trying to run out.
@@DecSteele oh yeah, I'm not blaming her for that interaction. But he as a father should have been aware enough to not make it worse.
@@dougallen9689 I don’t think he made it worse, I’m sure he was trying to tell her to not let him leave like that.
I love the soundtrack they added to the water planet. I think I read somewhere that the "ticking" that happens in the background is on purpose. It happens every 1.25 seconds and it's there to represent a full day passing on earth... so crazy.
I wish Maple had been able to see this in the theater at least if not I-Max. The worm hole scene would have been amazing for her.
I remember it was so freaking loud couldn't hear my brother talking during the movie
Who is Maple?
@@stannisbaratheon7592Um the reactor on screen
@@krashd 0:08
Seeing this in Imax is still to this day the best theater experience I’ve ever had, shit was glorious.
The ticking sound, while they're on the high-gravity water planet, that's in the background, in the music? Every "tick", every 1.25 seconds, is a day passing on Earth.
Christopher Nolan and Hans Zimmer: The best Director and Composer any movie could have.
But who was Spielberg and John Williams
Haven't watched Dune yet?
P.T. Anderson and Jonny Greenwood entered the chat
Don’t think I’d go that far but they’re a hell of a duo and I fuckin love this movie.
@@DoremiFasolatido1979 that sucked ass
One of my top 5 movies. Let's go!
Funny how my top 5 movies, 2 of them have Matt Damon lmfao
(Saving Private Ryan, Interstellar)
This is one of my favorite movies of all time. Thanks for watching it, Maple!
18:17 the only reaction that shows Brand's reaction to the Edmund's status, which confirms how close they are.
Word’s are like oysters. There’s too many onions
21:12 The soundtrack with the ticking is so intense. I know people have prob already said it but the fact that the song's every tick is a day in earth
Anyone remember the trailer for this movie ?basically have like nothing away, was so interesting, the mystery was incredible. Wish more movies followed suit
For some reason I never saw a trailer or knew about this - some coworkers rounded us up to go see a movie one afternoon, and I’d never heard of it.
I have never seen anyone else make that Plan B/fertilized eggs connection; I can't believe that didn't occur to me when I first saw it. Nice job pointing that out.
Murph not getting to say goodbye right when she changed her mind gets me every time
The line about millimeters of materials separating them from millions of miles of space reminded me of what McCoy said in the 2009 Star Trek movie. That space is nothing but disease and danger cloacked in darkness and silence. That's outer space in a nutshell
This movie did a great job at visually and audbily describing the passage of time. Each rhythmic "tick" that you hear beginning at 21:02 is equal to every, single day that passes back on earth.
Then those ticks should have no pause between them, if it's supposed to be seven years per hour there on that water planet.
STAY (message)was not meant for him( cooper). It was for Murph to STAY, so that he can transfer the data.
Love transcends space and time. Basic message of the story. Perfect
I love the calm intelligence you bring to these reactions
Interstellar is one of my favorite movies... I still remember the day I watched it in the cinema and how much of an impact it made on me.
Great reaction, as always 👍
Kipp did the calculations to show what it would be like to cross through the wormhole, it's like stepping into a room. Christopher Nolan thought it looked terrible so they made it more dramatic for the movie.
If that's what the math shows, that it's basically just like stepping into another room, that that's quite anticlimactic. It's just, you go through, and Boom! You're there? Blah. Meh. Words to similar effect.
I saw this in theaters. I have NEVER gotten queasy watching any movie, 3D or not, in my entire life.
Interstellar is the ONE exception. Our brains simply cannot comprehend anything higher than three dimensional space, and the way they visualized it here actually made my head hurt. If that's not a testament to how accurate this movie was, scientifically speaking, I don't know what is.
One of my favourite details of the making of the film is the rendering of the black holes (which involved making calculations to bend light, rather than just the usual straight line ray tracing) was used in physics papers by Kip Thorn, one of the science advisors on the film. No university had the resources to try to do those effects (or at least couldn't justify committing the amount of time and money it took to do them)
Murph: "You wouldn't be here if it wasn't for me." Deeeeep.
I also love ASMR. As a night worker / day sleeper, it helps so very much.
All the feels. Mind bending. Love your reactions
Chad, i don’t know how or why u found Arianna and Maple but, u best not lose them. Their individual reactions to movies/TV series’ r THE best.
Yeah, I was wondering where Arianna was...
Theres 2 of them?? Wtf?? And who the hell is chad???
Imagine being able to watch interstellar for the first time in 2022 :') listen hans zimmer masterpiece for the first time, wish it could be me.
"Whoa, that guy looks EVIL!!!" Hey now, that's just the way he always looks. Wes Bentley can't help having some of the angriest eyebrows in the business ...
During the wave scene, each ticking sound equals to 1.25 seconds, which means 1 year passes on Earth.
"Don't make me leave like this Smurf--I mean, Murf!"
this movie is outstanding btw this blackhole looks etc is as close to real life as we could knew back in the day when movie was made now we know much more
YES!!!!!!!!!!!! I'LL BE THERE CRYING WITH YOU!!!!!!
This movie never fails to crush my soul.
The irony of the plan being titled Plan B was lost on me till noe, thanks lmao
This is my all time favorite movie. I hope one day I will have a family to share this masterpiece with
This was one of the best IMAX films I ever saw - was just sat there most of it with my jaw dropped open! I'd love it if they made Tau Zero in a similar style. 💖Maple & Arianna are the best people to watch films with 🙂💖
when they are on the water planet you hear a ticking, each tick is 1 day on earth
This is the best music ever and the music is amazing, Hans zimmer is the best.
On the water planet, every tick in background is 1.25 seconds which equals a day on earth..
This is one of my all time favorite movies
In terms of g forces, flying into space in a rocket is like going on a world-class roller coaster, except not as intense most of the time (the rocket isn't as intense). You don't need to train your body for that, although to be prepared for anything that might happen, you'd probably want to do it anyway. Mostly you're tested to make sure that you're not particularly susceptible or vulnerable in any way. Lots of people want to go to space, but not many get to, so why choose someone who might pass out or throw up? Note that like I said, roller coasters can be more intense, so it's not that stringent a requirement, but the people in charge still have to check and test you.
“I’m not a fan of water”
…
Oh boy… 😂
I loved watching your reaction to this! Such an emotional film. I definitely cried a few times myself. Subscribed!
And btw. this Movie is one of them, i would give everything to see this for the very first time!
I rented the
Movie because of your notification. I must say I'm glad. Loved it.
The "Klicksound" you hear at the Planet "Numero Uno" (with the "Mountains") means that every single klick is a past day on earth! And Christopher Nolan says, he not wanted Hans to make a Score to his Movie, no he cutted the Movie to his Score! So this is what this bound makes Movies this great!
for those who dont know there is an odd ticking in the background of the water planet and thats supposed to tell you that every tick is a day passing on earth
The best film i've ever watched
little fun fact Christopher Nolan planted real corn for the drive in the fields then after he was done with it sold it for a profit.
"How did we get here", the answer is simple - Harambe.
Music in this movie is one of the best OST in history...
19:18 drinking water out of a guinness glass... that has to be criminal 😂
Guys amazing Info;
Look at 21:36 there is a background music which is Tik tak tik tak. Kind of beat.. You know what is that mean? That means; every beat is one day on earth.. you can count..
Hans Zimmer is genious guy.. Wonderful touching.. 👍🧡🧡
I like how this movie portrays environmental decay with different grains going extinct and rough dust storms. It's not big and epic like "Day After Tomorrow"; it's a slow death that makes the planet harsher to live on bit by bit, more like what's happening in real life
@@kato093 Increasing temperatures that are making the US central plains (which have good soil for farming) slightly worse for agriculture, shifting the better growing temperatures northward to where the soil is worse, and therefore reducing our production capacity for food.
@@kato093 Besides the more extreme weather, severe floods and droughts?
i would like to highly recommend the film called *The Void* from 2017.
I've seen this movie at least 20 times (it somehow gets better every time) and I never noticed the Plan B/fertilized eggs thing until you pointed it out. Mind blown.
I couldn't stop laughing when it turned out the coordinates sent back to Cooper were sent by Cooper.
Yes, a wormhole would be a sphere, much like how a black hole is also a sphere, I suppose. That's what they look like in our normal (for us) perception of three-dimensional space.
I dig how Maple sees the links with Saturn/time and plan B/eggs, I've seen this flick 5 times and I never made those connections
Watched it several years ago. Not a Keeper in my library. I recall it as prodding along for way too long.
The problems we face everyday, are insignificant to the size of the universe. Are lives are merely water droplets in mist, compared to the age of the universe. We were not meant to live in boxes, working our lives away and never fully enjoying this life we were given. This movie awoke a self awareness in many people and changed many lives, even if some of the science in this move were incorrect or slightly different than what we know.
On the water planet, every second is over a month
The spaceflight and landing scenes in this movie kind of remind me of the original _Planet of the Apes_ (1968). You should watch that movie, by the way. It was written by Rod Serling of _Twilight Zone_ fame, and it has an interesting twist at the end.
19:38 Scientists were asked what a black hole in that scenario look like so Nolan could use it for that movie. Before that, this image did not exist, and the way light bends around a black hole, originally created for tha movie, is now being used to display black holes in science and universities.
I swear once you think maple is being lewd with her commentary you can never unhear it :D
Fun fact,
Most of the old people talking, are actually from a real documentary about the "American dust bowl"
A Ken Burns documentary to be precise
@@DaleKingProfile I had actually seen the documentary before watching the movie,
So I was like "hey, hold on a second"
@@notsureyou Same here
Fuck yes this movie rules, seeing it in imax was the best theater experience I’ve ever had. Anyway great to see y’all do this movie, really good movie for reactions.
i found the story too negative. And the relative effects, were very unsettling.
@@mathematics5573 That's exactly as it should be.
@@spdcrzy too negative, in that when he arrived home to his daughter, who was 98 or something, not a single one of her family even acknowledged him, which was odd and rubbish/unrealistic writing, as he was their grandfather and great grandfather or great great grandfather, and uncle and great uncle etc , even thought he was 30. It was negative and made no sense. Bad writing. he was their family member, and yet they ignored him. Not very welcoming for him, Why?
@@mathematics5573 how is that negative, he returned and his daughter saved humanity and was over 100yrs old and had a massive family of her own now, the family had never met Cooper on their entire lives so of course they are restrained and allow for their mom/grandma to have a nice moment with her father. Parts of the movie are definitely sad but that’s life, the movie end/ on a high note, his daughter gets to see him again and know that he never left her there to die and then he goes off to get brand who found a habitable planet. It’s really not that negative and a lot of stuff in there is very realistic
@@puppetmaster8551 you are allowed you opinion. I'm allowed mine. I have sometimes met distance relations. The family still showed warmth towards them. He wasn't even their distant relative. he was their grandfather and great grandfather, and they ignored him. it was shite. a nice moment. how about a nice few hours or days!
19:09 - plan B, lmfao I never noticed this till now
Good call about Saturn being the God of time. Might’ve had significance to the wormhole being place there.
What you need to wrap your brain around is not normal time elapsed, but time dilation: how time is "warped" both by relativistic speeds near that of light, as well as deep "gravity wells" such as being close to a black hole. When Cooper told Murph that they might be the same age, he meant that she would be his age while he will hardly have aged at all. Or she might actually be older than her dad. Yes, this is the way the universe works--not in our normal lives, but under specific extreme conditions like Cooper will encounter and experience. Time moves normally for each person, but while days and weeks went by for Cooper, years and decades went by for Murph. This is the nature of the strange, still poorly understood universe in which we live.
By the way, your feet are a tiny bit younger than your head because you probably spent much of your life with your feet closer to the gravity well of the Earth. In normal life on the surface of Earth, this difference in age is so minuscule that it can barely be measured, let alone be enough to matter, but what I just said is an effect of physics that can be calculated, and it is real.
You don't have to train your body to go into space, you just have to be fit and healthy. The reason astronaut training takes years is not to condition the body, it's to teach an astronaut how everything works, like literally _everything_, they have to know how every single system on the craft works because if something goes wrong in space there are no tow-trucks to bring you home. If it breaks then you are the only one who can fix it, so you need to know electronics, mechanics, hydraulics, everything.
Also in regards to the "1 hour equals 7 years" stuff, that is actually factually correct. Gravity affects time since gravitational pull slows down anything in it, because we are standing on a planet we get a bit of time drag (that we don't notice because it's normal to us), and then being close to a big gravity source like the sun adds a lot more drag. This puts us at something like a 2 on the 1 to 10 scale of how time should work and how slow time would be if you were near an enormous black hole.
When a spacecraft leaves Earth and travels a few million miles any clocks on board tick faster because they are outside of Earth's gravity, if that spacecraft got close to something big like Jupiter then the internal clocks would tick slower than they would on Earth. Because Gargantua (the blackhole in the movie) has an enormous mass many millions of times greater than our sun it means that time on any planet surrounding it (like the water planet they landed on) would slow down so much to the point that spending one hour there would equal many years on Earth.
It's known as relativity, whether you were on Earth, or Jupiter, or near a black hole, you would never notice the time difference because the local time would always be relative to you, but other places in the universe would be experiencing time faster or slower depending on the nearby gravity sources, their sun, their planets, even their moons - the cumulative total of all those gravity sources then determines how fast or slow time passes.
Ehhh, most people have to train to be fit and healthy. If all you do is sit around and study, you're going ti become unhealthy, unfit, etc.
Long story short, astronauts exercise, AKA train, they even do so while in space to keep their bodies "healthy and fit"...
Awesome movie. Never will get old...
Damn Maple a whole snack. And then some.
Best movie ever! One of the best face reactions to the wave scene ever!
Maple, I like asmr too. My favorite asmr'r is "ASMR SHORTBREAD." I believe it's because of her breathtaking scottish accent. . . And her gorgeous cheekbones.
Splitting into parts sucks :/ Such a tease xD
All things considered, I think this is my favorite Nolan movie.
The Usual Suspects, you guys should react to that one next.
all the light and space special effects, were created using Einsteins Gravity equations.
Juicy editing!
16:15 they stole that science demo from Thor: Waititi But All The Jokes Fall Flat!
I didn't think any movie would top LOTR for me, but this one became the best movie I have ever seen 🧡. Luckily I went to see it in cinema during release. Always manages to make me very emotional with the mindblowing acting, music and visuals 🥰😭❤️🤯...
Reactions like yours reminds me of my own and is why I love watching these reaction videos ☺️.
I’m claustrophobic as hell no way I’ll just chill on the ship on the way to Saturn 🪐
My favorite movie ever
7:10 Anne Hathaway has always looked cute and adorable.
13:21 I think the word you're looking for is "ethereal".
14:25 I think this is what they came up with when they researched cryogenics and suspended animation. It's a way to keep ice crystals from forming in one's tissues while at the same time lowering their body temperature and slowing their vital functions to just this side of death. You wouldn't breathe but maybe once per day or so, but you would still breathe.
15:55 I've read that some people experience ASMR (Autonomic Sensory Meridian Response) and others just don't, like they don't have the gene for it. No judgement, that's just how it is.
NCC-17:01 (LOL): If a wormhole is a spherical hole in space, then it's still a hole. No improper way to enter it, you just go through that glass ball in space and come out the other side at your destination.
17:41 That's just space being bent, not matter. There's nothing actually happening with her hand, just the space it's in. The distortion creates an optical effect, making her hand appear to bend out of shape, when in fact it's the space her hand is in that's bending, and not her hand at all.
18:29 Relativity teaches us that gravity and time are related. The stronger a gravity field becomes, the more it distorts spacetime. Since gravity is a function of mass, and mass becomes infinitely greater as it approaches _c_ (the speed of light in a vacuum), and a black hole's gravity is so strong that light cannot escape it, then clearly time is a function of gravity, since gravity is a function of mass, mathematically speaking. So, the closer an object gets to a strong gravity source, such as a black hole, the more time it takes from the perspective of an observer for the traveling object to approach the black hole, while the traveler will continue to experience time at its normal rate.
there is such a thing as "Too Much Weed" , you know? 👁️👄👁️
I never noticed that dirty tile that comment messed with me lmfaoo
I feel like it's not the other person's job to make the person leaving fell better about leaving. Is someone has to walk away, then just walk away. Don't try to guilt the person you're leaving into giving you their blessing. That's utterly selfish.
"We're spinning" haha wait till Matt Damon screws the pooch.
Love ASMR, hate waters. That’s me. Haha
Support! And anticipation. Uh... see you later, before Part 2. :)
I normally like these videos but I wish there was a Super Like for the hotdog JPEG quote of Hank Hill
Maple is way too cute.
Someone is always cutting onions when I'm watching this movie. :|