Interstellar (2014) | *First Time Watching* | Movie Reaction | Asia and BJ

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Пікірлер: 983

  • @zombiecarnes
    @zombiecarnes11 ай бұрын

    The docking scene may be the most perfect use of music in any movie...ever...

  • @chrisrowe2308

    @chrisrowe2308

    11 ай бұрын

    Come on TARS!!

  • @KSDVLmom

    @KSDVLmom

    11 ай бұрын

    Or the clock ticking music also on water planet

  • @MiguelStinson88

    @MiguelStinson88

    11 ай бұрын

    fun fact, Hans Zimmer actually didn't put it on the first soundtrack release (after the premiere) and had to pull up vol.2 directly after because people bought the soundtrack for exactly that track xD Zimmer said, he thought that piece was nothing special and would bore the people, that's why he left it out. xD

  • @kingman2332

    @kingman2332

    11 ай бұрын

    The view looking down from the top with the planet in the background needed to be 5 seconds longer.

  • @vodengc520

    @vodengc520

    11 ай бұрын

    The funny thing is, the second piece of music that comes to mind is the Joker theme from The Dark Knight (at least, the intro to it).... which was also scored by Zimmer, lol. Dude knows how to build tension in his music.

  • @tgosselin2528
    @tgosselin252811 ай бұрын

    How y'all made it thru this movie without crying is crazy! I swear, I can't get thru it without crying at least 5 times.

  • @DekkarJr

    @DekkarJr

    11 ай бұрын

    I always lose it when he's holding his elderly daughters hand near the end and the music kicks in.

  • @Harkness78

    @Harkness78

    11 ай бұрын

    They didn't cry during Shawshank or Green Mile, they are immune to movie feels.

  • @drumnbassdan

    @drumnbassdan

    11 ай бұрын

    Same and ive watched it many times.

  • @CreeperBoyGamingyt

    @CreeperBoyGamingyt

    11 ай бұрын

    I didn’t cry either. In fact, I’ve never cried at a movie ever. Is there something wrong with me?

  • @rumham7466

    @rumham7466

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Harkness78and titanic too. Lol.

  • @ccalkin
    @ccalkin11 ай бұрын

    I love how Asia's solutions are "you better find someone else, I ain't doing all that!"... Never change! Just hilarious

  • @brandonmason388

    @brandonmason388

    11 ай бұрын

    She would be the safest person in any crisis. There’s so many things she won’t do 😂

  • @YouOnlyIiveTwice

    @YouOnlyIiveTwice

    11 ай бұрын

    Rumor has it that was pretty much the extent of Steve Jobs' contribution to the team that created the first iPhone.

  • @lelouchvibritannia4028

    @lelouchvibritannia4028

    11 ай бұрын

    That's not a rumor, that's just a fact. Jobs was a businessman, not an inventor. He pitched the invention as an idea after it was created.@@YouOnlyIiveTwice

  • @reddwarf9422

    @reddwarf9422

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes lol. I'm sticking with her if I am ever stuck in a horror movie. We would survive 100% lol

  • @S1N1CAL
    @S1N1CAL11 ай бұрын

    Btw a brief simplified explanation for the bookshelf scene. The "them" they were referring throughout the movie turned out to be future human beings from the same future Cooper made possible by sending his daughter the quantum data from the inside of the black hole. Although those 5D humans were from even further in the future from when Cooper wakes up at the end. They're like centuries or millennia ahead in that future. From the moment cooper ejected from his ship, the 5D beings were holding him together and preventing him from being broken apart by the black hole. His voice vibrating is evidence of the gravitational strain on his body trying to pull him apart. But they're preventing it. They also created that 3D library maze especially for Cooper because he can't interact with their 5th dimensional reality to manipulate time and gravity. So they make him a 3D space that he _can_ interact with. It allowed him a way to manipulate gravity to create all the prior events from the movie (the dust gravity anomaly with the NASA coordinates, the handshake, etc) and he uses that interface to transmit the quantum data to Murph through morse code via the watch hand. When he was done, the beings closed the tesseract and placed him just outside the wormhole they went in so he'd be found and saved.

  • @jakecameron2976

    @jakecameron2976

    11 ай бұрын

    But the future humans were only made possible because of the worm hole. So who placed it there?

  • @drakonik2782

    @drakonik2782

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@jakecameron2976Future humans placed the wormhole. This is why time travel is considered a paradox, there is no "who started the loop?" It exists because it needs to.

  • @coleh2053

    @coleh2053

    11 ай бұрын

    @@jakecameron2976 it's a schrodinger's cat situation, the future humanity is able to observe time as a physical dimension like we observe space, therefore they can interact with their earlier selves and change the past to save the future as they exist in an superpositional reality.

  • @leighd4908

    @leighd4908

    11 ай бұрын

    But why didn’t the ‘future us’ just send a USB with the quantum data through the wormhole with a note?

  • @drakonik2782

    @drakonik2782

    11 ай бұрын

    @@leighd4908 Sarcastic reason: so you have a movie to watch. Movie reason: the only two things that transcend time are gravity and love. The Coopers needed both to convey the data and its significance.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho9311 ай бұрын

    "Because my dad promised me." Instant tears every time. Also, no matter when I see it or how many time I have seen it already, the "years of messages" scene gets me every damn time, especially if you remember that Coop lost a grandson in a matter of seconds.

  • @THEvagabond29

    @THEvagabond29

    11 ай бұрын

    I watched this in IMAX w/ my 14 y/o when it came out, it was a real movie/popcorn experience (lightening in a bottle for fathers and daughters watching this).

  • @ViktorRadoslavov

    @ViktorRadoslavov

    11 ай бұрын

    first time ive cried over a movie and it was in the theater

  • @THEvagabond29

    @THEvagabond29

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ViktorRadoslavov I did too when watching w/ my daughter, we actually started having coffee and breakfast more.

  • @Steelburgh

    @Steelburgh

    11 ай бұрын

    @@THEvagabond29 I'm so jealous. I wish they would do a limited IMAX run. I missed it and this is the kind of movie IMAX was made for.

  • @coyotelong4349

    @coyotelong4349

    11 ай бұрын

    Same. No matter how many times I watch this movie I’m silently crying every time So damn powerful

  • @zillagod724
    @zillagod72411 ай бұрын

    As a diehard Christopher Nolan fan, I was smiling ear to ear seeing Asia breaking the ending down so well to BJ after watching it for the first time. So many people say you have to watch his movies 2 or 3 times to fully grasp his film's storylines.

  • @Steelburgh

    @Steelburgh

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I've seen it so many times and thought about it so much, it's easy for forget how baffling it was the first time through.

  • @mrlahey9234

    @mrlahey9234

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I was impressed. She picked up on a lot of things I didn't.

  • @yolandahernandez4130

    @yolandahernandez4130

    11 ай бұрын

    I was thinking more like 'did the daughter figure it out' and that's why they were able to create a stable new home in another planet. 🤔🤷‍♀️ That's how she knew where Anne Hathaway was and told her dad to go there.

  • @mrlahey9234

    @mrlahey9234

    11 ай бұрын

    @@yolandahernandez4130 his daughter made the worm hole and the tesseract for her dad? Mind blown

  • @DerpMuse

    @DerpMuse

    11 ай бұрын

    @@mrlahey9234 No the daughter didn't make the wormhole or tesseract. When Brand landed and set up the colony, she sent a signal back to Earth through the wormhole to tell NASA that she was successful. The same way that NASA learned about the 4 planets to begin with. When the Lazarus people landed they send a signal and hibernate for time to pass. The wormhole was faster than the blackhole for the signal so Brands signal reached Murph before Cooper returned. People seem to miss that part.

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose200011 ай бұрын

    Asia is so hilarious, she is doing none of the stuff needed in this movie to save the world. No rockets, no wrist watch, no spin gravity, no warm water hybernation, no worm hole, none of it. I guess we all die on Asia's watch. HA

  • @marshallhughes4514

    @marshallhughes4514

    11 ай бұрын

    IKR? Asia like I will go out to help if the flight is no longer than 2 hours ........ lol

  • @rashadd2615

    @rashadd2615

    11 ай бұрын

    I mean they went through a wormhole, had to manually hook to the space station, and then traverse through a black hole.

  • @yusufraage8554

    @yusufraage8554

    11 ай бұрын

    She will save the world by raising a man like Cooper.

  • @lethaldose2000

    @lethaldose2000

    11 ай бұрын

    @@x_mau9355 no doubt. I give her some slack, cause moist of us would shit in our pants dealing with stuff in this movie.

  • @Itsunclegabby

    @Itsunclegabby

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@lethaldose2000 We won't die on Asia's watch, because.... No wrist watch. ;)

  • @DekkarJr
    @DekkarJr11 ай бұрын

    The scene where they realize they aren't mountains, they're *waves* is insane to me

  • @silents4642
    @silents464211 ай бұрын

    The black hole was actually the closest we can get to of what a black hole would actually look like. This movie has a lot of credit for using tru physics in a movie. Even how the outside view of the ship it's always silent like it would be in real life

  • @putinscat1208
    @putinscat120811 ай бұрын

    The docking scene is still the greatest demonstration of physics in a movie. The second best, Matt Damon going out that airlock!

  • @Knight-Bishop

    @Knight-Bishop

    11 ай бұрын

    And iirc, an astronaut actually had to do that once. 😬

  • @loadmastergod1961

    @loadmastergod1961

    11 ай бұрын

    Second best scene with Matt Damon. First being when he gets revenge upon in Team America

  • @AyAy008

    @AyAy008

    11 ай бұрын

    Matt Damon

  • @Hadouken65
    @Hadouken6511 ай бұрын

    The way I cry every time Murph runs out the door as her dad is driving away. People say Nolan’s movies aren’t great at emotionally hooking you but Interstellar emotionally kicked the sh*t out of me

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben11 ай бұрын

    Seeing this in theaters was wild! "Because my dad promised me." Gets my tears going every gosh darn time.

  • @danzthename
    @danzthename11 ай бұрын

    BJ's "astrophycism" is the perfect new word to describe this movie. It's like astrophysics with a little dollop of mysticism. And that combination makes it amazing! Glad you enjoyed it.

  • @TheLostSuperman

    @TheLostSuperman

    11 ай бұрын

    It is absolutely perfect. I'm using it to describe this movie from now on!

  • @Thisandthat8908

    @Thisandthat8908

    11 ай бұрын

    you forgot the music.

  • @kinetic747
    @kinetic74711 ай бұрын

    Hans Zimmer nailed it with the score to this movie. If you ever get the chance to see him perform live take it, it's an experience you'll never forget.

  • @accountable9026
    @accountable902611 ай бұрын

    I love that TARS and CASE had such different personalities. Such likable metal boxes.

  • @antoinettelopes

    @antoinettelopes

    11 ай бұрын

    I left the theater in love with TARS. 🥰

  • @sc1338

    @sc1338

    11 ай бұрын

    I always find robots so cute. I have a problem 😂

  • @lucianaromulus1408

    @lucianaromulus1408

    10 ай бұрын

    I want one of my own lol

  • @JWhiskey71
    @JWhiskey7111 ай бұрын

    The 3d representation of time is called a tesseract. The best way I've read to explain it is to imagine it as a book. In a book you can open to any page and read what is happening in the story at that moment. Earlier pages go back in time, later pages are more recent. The tesseract allowed Cooper to access every past second in Murph"s room, and he could use gravity to cross time and communicate.

  • @sherbaum1985

    @sherbaum1985

    7 ай бұрын

    Great explanation! As long as the book itself is linear in time.

  • @larl-earson

    @larl-earson

    6 ай бұрын

    Or in another way, like scrubbing around this youtube video

  • @kahlbutomacfarland
    @kahlbutomacfarland11 ай бұрын

    “Rage against the dying of the light” I’m not into poetry, but this one is a fav. It’s about not accepting death. Rage against dying. Fight till your last moment against death, against the dying of the light.

  • @haileydigiamarino707

    @haileydigiamarino707

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm not really into poetry either, but both of my favorite movies (Last Samurai, Interstellar) have such profound poems. (:

  • @riolkin

    @riolkin

    11 ай бұрын

    @@haileydigiamarino707 I might be in the minority here, but I feel like when people say they don't like poetry it just means they haven't seen the right poems. School seems to ruin it for most people, poetry units are so dry and academic. The best poetry is for the soul. A personal favorite of mine is "We Wear the Mask" by Paul Laurence Dunbar. I find myself quoting to myself it on days I have to deal with a lot of people and I'm not really feeling it.

  • @haileydigiamarino707

    @haileydigiamarino707

    11 ай бұрын

    @@riolkin I struggled in school a lot as a kid and I didn’t have the best teachers so I definitely agree with you. I probably would love poetry if I explored it more because I love music not saying it’s the same, but I’ve always connected with words that are deep and meaningful. Do you have any suggestions on poetry? (:

  • @miff227

    @miff227

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@riolkin I have a different take. Peotry doesn't do it for me, i'm a musician. Music that allows me space to choose my own riffs and play around with in my head is the best. I do enjoy books, I enjoy TV. With books I often wander in the world, not actually reading, TV doesn't give the space during, but certainly after you can wander the world, be each character etc. I assume peotry is so powerful to those who get it because it allows even more space for you to wander the world created. I also think comic books do the same for those who enjoy those. But for me, it is music where I wander the most.

  • @psycictree27
    @psycictree2711 ай бұрын

    This is one of the greatest movies made after the year 2000, this movie explained the Time-Space equation, Quantum physics, Einstein's Theory of Relativity, and Time Travel in a better way than any other book, in my opinion. Loved your reaction !!!!

  • @OntarioDerek
    @OntarioDerek11 ай бұрын

    Fun Fact: on the water/wave planet (1st one) the ticking/droplet sound that passes every second or so represents a WHOLE DAY passing back on earth. Kinda mind blowing but thats relatively folks!! lol

  • @ViktorRadoslavov

    @ViktorRadoslavov

    11 ай бұрын

    a whole week

  • @Steelburgh

    @Steelburgh

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ViktorRadoslavov It's a day. If a week passed every 1.25 seconds or so, it'd be more like 55 years/hour.

  • @zimvader25
    @zimvader2511 ай бұрын

    Long comment because i absolutely love this movie, here goes: Edmund's planet was where Cooper told her they had enough fuel to barely make. And everything was on the endurance. The embryos and equipment plus the original explorers had their own camp, like Mann's. The tesseract is where the future humans made Murphys infinite rooms, because Coopers connection with her was quantifiable. It was something that could actually be measured and used. And he didn't exactly go back in time, he was just in a window of sorts. With gravity being the only tool able to cross through time. Which is what he used to write the coordinates to nasa and the data from within the black hole that was needed to reconcile the equation. In simple terms, the theory is that knowing the full equation of something, gives you the ability to manipulate it. Once she figured out gravity she was able to manipulate it to get the giant space stations full of people off of earth. AND they even had a new planet waiting for them, at edmunds. It's kind of a "what came first the chicken or the egg" problem at the end, since the data she needed wouldn't have been possible without humans in the future being able to manipulate it to get cooper and the original explorers to the new galaxy and into and out of the tesseract. And they would'nt be able to do that, if she hadn't figured out in the present time how to manipulate gravity. It's a loop paradox. And the end had Brand at camp with the embryos, not knowing what happened with humanity, as the endurance was their communication device and it barely got her where she needed to go. So she probably had set some embryos, and was, like old murph says, about to settle down for the long nap. Probably set a timer for 9 months because there would be no point in her using resources she didn't need to. The audience just has to imagine cooper and tars arrive and wake her up early, and she would be completely confused since she thought he was dead and tars destroyed, to explain that they did it and the rest of humanity is on their way.

  • @1953jazzman

    @1953jazzman

    11 ай бұрын

    Best commentary on the movie I've read since 2014! Thank you.

  • @JesusPerez-yo5or

    @JesusPerez-yo5or

    11 ай бұрын

    🤔 Pretty good explanation... The room is supposed to be a representation of the multi dimensions. Whether that be just the fourth dimension or a series of dimensions that spans beyond time and space.🤓

  • @nicebluejay

    @nicebluejay

    11 ай бұрын

    but why would he "send" the coordinates of nasa in the first place?

  • @deszu

    @deszu

    10 ай бұрын

    @@nicebluejay to save the current generation. if you remember, he says stay through morse but once he realizes why he’s there, he sends the coordinates through binary so that he can help murph and his past self, even tho these incidents happened in reverse order when they were first shown

  • @aakarshrai4823

    @aakarshrai4823

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nicebluejay If you notice, Cooper said "STAY" and "Don't let me leave Murph" because he was not able understand the "Tesseract". Afterwards, TARS connected to Cooper and made him understand the "Tesseract" that's when Cooper asked for the coordinated for NASA in Binary and went to the moment in the room when the dust was coming in from the window. Hope this explains.

  • @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle
    @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle8 ай бұрын

    A space movie with no aliens. No monsters. No ray guns. No galactic empires. Perfection

  • @matthewralph6931
    @matthewralph693111 ай бұрын

    Asia getting tense for the docking scene and the wave scene just shows how important music can be to a movie. I never used to notice the music in movies but would still get the tense feeling without realizing why. Hans zimmer is genuinely incredible and the music he made for this movie is half the reason why it’s so loved to this day whether people even realize it or not

  • @nicebluejay

    @nicebluejay

    11 ай бұрын

    it's funny cuz the soundtrack on this one is not very complicated and 90% organ lol, there is a great doc on youtube about it.

  • @S1N1CAL
    @S1N1CAL11 ай бұрын

    Imagine the look on Brand's face when she see's Cooper come out of another, more advanced ranger ship. When the last time she saw him, he was plummiting straight into the one place in the universe that by our math, absolutely nothing can escape. Ever. But he did.

  • @ambergarner8471
    @ambergarner847111 ай бұрын

    The fact that Brand took her helmet off shows that Edmunds planet can support human life. There's oxygen. If they had just gone with his planet!!

  • @elijahfoster2

    @elijahfoster2

    Ай бұрын

    Except they never would have saved the earth that way, so it worked out in the end

  • @chrischarlescook
    @chrischarlescook11 ай бұрын

    I don't really watch much modern cinema. A friend was visiting from afar and as they were leaving, they told me I had to see Interstellar ASAP. I rented it on YT at 1am the same night. Not realising how long it was or knowing anything about it. What an adventure. Dawn came just after I finished and I just stared at the sky for ages. You can never forget this film! ❤️

  • @sophianasa7950

    @sophianasa7950

    11 ай бұрын

    I love this haha ! It’s one of those that saves the movie industry I can’t lie

  • @tiffaniterris2886

    @tiffaniterris2886

    11 ай бұрын

    If you rented it at 1am, down would still be off before the film finished.

  • @chrischarlescook

    @chrischarlescook

    11 ай бұрын

    @tiffaniterris2886 Dawn is around 3-4am in the UK during Summer. But thanks Sherlock.

  • @DirtSpud
    @DirtSpud11 ай бұрын

    I love the symbolism of Dr. Mann being the best of us and also by name representing "mankind". And his story involves getting in a fist fight on an alien planet, in another solar system lol. The ONLY four human beings in that entire galaxy and two of them got into a fist fight. Comedy taken to another level there.

  • @starlord3496
    @starlord349611 ай бұрын

    1 of the best Sci Fi Space/TimeTravel films ever made imo

  • @starlord3496

    @starlord3496

    11 ай бұрын

    @@x_mau9355 it is time traveling.

  • @brettmuir5679
    @brettmuir567911 ай бұрын

    "My protractor, it didn't work to good back then" BJ cracked his own self up to good XD

  • @melanie62954

    @melanie62954

    11 ай бұрын

    I know, and then he rattles off the relativity equation and Pi in the same breath as saying he was terrible at geometry! 😆

  • @jake51515
    @jake5151511 ай бұрын

    To understand the bookshelf, the main thing to understand is its time represented in a physical manner. It's humans who unlocked the demension of time in order to to save themselves. It's called a tesseract. Everything including the blackhole was put In that spot by future humans to help past humans make it to their next habitable planet, which is where Anne's character ended up. When they were traveling through the blackhole after passing saturn, Cooper touched hands with her which is why she said it felt like someone was shaking her hand, Coopers future self shook her hand as their past selves traveled through the blackhole. All of it was by humans by unlocking the dimension of time. And because they discovered how to do so, Cooper did, it gave him unlimited tries and time to warn Murphy about the plan and to help her solve the equation that lead to her saving humanity. That's why he could use Morris code through the watch and why if you look at the watch when he was doing so, it showed thick lines traveling vertically. Because through all of time, through an infinite number of realities, he could manipulate the watch hands. He was his future self warning his past self and also helping murphy.

  • @jip5889
    @jip588911 ай бұрын

    This is one of those “greatest movies” material.

  • @bcn1gh7h4wk
    @bcn1gh7h4wk11 ай бұрын

    Zimmer said he composed the soundtrack for organ because when comparing it to other instruments of the orchestra, with the piano being the most recent, and IT with it's inherent complexity, the organ is ten orders of magnitude more complex, while being much earlier than the piano. it was so complex at the time, that sitting down to play it would be like sitting on the cockpit of a starship.

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie211211 ай бұрын

    The foreshadowing in the early part of the film was amazing. Murphy: "I thought you were the ghost." Cooper: "No. There are no such things as ghosts, babe." Cooper: "I just don't think your bookshelf's trying to talk to you." Ms. Hanley: ".... we need to teach our kids about this planet, not tales of leaving it." Cooper: "I can't be your ghost right now. I need to exist."

  • @brianmcmaster5112
    @brianmcmaster511211 ай бұрын

    Very Emotional movie. When he makes it back and sees his aged daughter, that's something else... he told her he was coming back. 😢

  • @_GT94_
    @_GT94_11 ай бұрын

    Now that your guys have reacted to 4 Christopher Nolan movies (Batman begins, dark knight , dark knight rises, now interstellar) it’s time to check another masterpiece written and directed by him called INCEPTION.

  • @kluneberg8952

    @kluneberg8952

    11 ай бұрын

    after that they can practice lip reading by watching Tenet

  • @samanthanickson6478

    @samanthanickson6478

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kluneberg8952 then after that get involved with nolan magic with prestige.

  • @waynemorton6120

    @waynemorton6120

    11 ай бұрын

    @@samanthanickson6478 My personal favourite of Nolan's. The Prestige has it all, it is a masterpiece.

  • @ADreamOrASong

    @ADreamOrASong

    11 ай бұрын

    @@samanthanickson6478 I second this! 👍

  • @Danny_R_

    @Danny_R_

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@samanthanickson6478Love that movie. Haven't watched that in years. Im gonna have to go rewatch that. I low key forgot about that movie. Such a great film.

  • @dax977
    @dax97711 ай бұрын

    This is a masterpiece of a movie, to have the brain power to think of this as a concept and make it into a visual movie is truly amazing! Cried like the 1st time i watched it all over again 😢

  • @billparrish4385
    @billparrish438511 ай бұрын

    Hi guys, hope this helps: The time difference described in the movie in simple terms is this: Einstein used complex math to come up with his Theory of Relativity, one of the implications of which says that the faster an object goes, time as experienced by that object slows, relative to other objects that are going slower. There are other parts of the Theory as well that don't relate as closely to the plot of the movie, like how as speed increases and time slows, the mass of the object also increases. Also how the speed of light is the universal constant ('c'), being the upper limit of speed at which Einstein said anything can move. Also how the basic equation of his Theory of Relativity (the amount of energy in an object is equal to its mass times the speed of light squared, or in notation, the well-known E = mc^2). But the time dilation implication of the Theory of Relativity is enough to grasp to understand the movie's plot elements.

  • @xzonia1
    @xzonia111 ай бұрын

    Okay, to explain what happened in the Tesseract as simply as I can, follow this thought exercise: First take a pencil (or imagine you're doing this) and make a dot on a sheet of paper. There are no dimensions to this dot. It does not have height, width, or depth to it. It's just a dot on a page (which scientists call a point in space). If you make a second dot and draw a line connecting the two, you have a one-dimensional drawing. It now has length (more commonly called height in a drawing with more dimensions). Make some more dots and lines to draw a square. Now you have a two-dimensional drawing. It has both height and width. Now draw some more dots and lines to make a cube. This is a three-dimensional drawing. It has height, width, and depth. These are the three axes of space in which we physically exist. However, we do not exist solely in space, but also in time. Time is considered a fourth dimension. It gives our lives shape through the ability to change our position in space in a way that a dot, line, square, or cube alone cannot. We're not just drawings on a page. We're animate objects because we exist in time. (Btw, this is also how cartoon films worked prior to the invention of CGI - drawings on a page that change slightly to advance their movement over time.) We humans only experience time in one direction, though, going forward through it. This is because we exist within it. If we existed outside of it (in a fifth dimension), we could see all points of time at the same time, in the same way we can see all of a dot, line, square, or cube drawn on a piece of paper at the same time. None of it is hidden from us now because we exist in a dimension higher than those three dimensions. If we could see all of time at the same time, it would be like each moment is a page in a book and we could flip to any page and see that moment fully at will. We could travel forwards or backwards in time as easily as flipping the pages of a book. Scientists speculate that we see ourselves as 4-dimensional beings, but that we are actually 5-dimensional beings. The fifth dimension is information. We have consciousness (awareness), and that is integral to who we are beyond our physical bodies and time. We simply have a perception problem where we're not seeing reality as it really is for us. We currently are failing to see our existence from that higher plane of being, the fifth dimension. This is because we have not acquired sufficient information yet to shift our perspective. The movie has Cooper (McConaughey) enter the Tesseract, a device that allows people to communicate over vast distances using gravity. Gravity distorts time in space, meaning we can use gravity to travel forwards or backwards in time with equal ease. Cooper realizes while in there that it is humanity who figured out how to perceive our reality from the fifth dimension by building the Tesseract (and likely other stuff prior to its construction), and he is able to use it to communicate with Murph through time and space. Humanity is no longer seeing time as a forward-only directional dimension; we can see all sides of time at the same time because we're now able to look at it from our true nature as 5th dimensional beings. It's a bit like standing on land, you can only see so far. If you climb a hill, adding the dimension of height, you can see much farther. Our perspective changes with the use of different dimensions. Right now we lack the knowledge to perceive our reality from the fifth dimension, but over time scientists believe we will gain that perspective and be able to "see" time from a new point of view. How? Well, the movie Arrival (with Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner) tackles the idea of how we as humans might stop perceiving time as linear, and instead see all of it at the same time. It's a fantastic movie, every bit as mind-blowing as Interstellar. I highly recommend you see it soon (you know, after you've re-watched Interstellar 5-6 times first). ;) Lol I hope this explanation helps! Loved your reactions to it!!😊❤

  • @bnn32-c7s
    @bnn32-c7s11 ай бұрын

    One of greatest movies ever made, the scene with Murr when he leaves it so dam tough, always breaks me. With Hans Zimmer soundtrack it is perfection

  • @vivacious_me
    @vivacious_me11 ай бұрын

    This masterpiece has me in tears. Every. Damn. Time. ❤😅

  • @Letha-Mae
    @Letha-Mae11 ай бұрын

    This is such a powerful beautiful movie I can't imagine going somewhere two minutes but it really be 20 yrs!! I feel like that when we lose someone close to us time literally stops and before we know it it's been 20 years

  • @HopeIsForbiddenHere
    @HopeIsForbiddenHere11 ай бұрын

    Young Murph's first line "I thought you were the ghost." 🙂 I love Dr. Mann's character. Touted as "the best of us," but he shows exactly why Plan A was critical, placing his own survival before that of the human race. Also, the fact that Hans Zimmer didn't win an award for this music is, by far, the biggest oversight in awards history.

  • @antoinettelopes
    @antoinettelopes11 ай бұрын

    I was already a Nolan fan when I saw this in the theater. It knocked me on my butt. The docking scene is one of the all-time greatest movie scenes. Movie critics would say his films lacked emotion but the good ones are all about love. You guys should check out INCEPTION if you haven't seen it yet. 🙏🏼💗

  • @Geminei
    @Geminei7 ай бұрын

    Lmfao the "WHAT IS HE DOIN?!" when he goes to dock XD

  • @jaksparrow6910
    @jaksparrow691011 ай бұрын

    Amazing movie... Everyone was talking before the movie, when we left the whole crowd was silent. Life changing

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose200011 ай бұрын

    The amazing this about Chris Nolan's writing is the level of emotional intelligence he assumes the audience has. ------ We all know Copper loves his daughter. But Nolan's writing show how Copper takes specific actions to care for and protect Murph. ------ When he says, "The first thing you learn about being a parent, is making sure your child is safe and protected. That includes not telling a ten year old girl, that the world is coming to an end." --------- In this exchange of dialogue Nolan is showing how Cooper specifically loves and care for Murph in ways too deep to comprehend. -------- In ways so deep that he would travel the universe to save his daughter and the rest of humanity.

  • @chadprice5718
    @chadprice571811 ай бұрын

    Just one of my favorite movies. Definitely have to watch a few times. You two are awesome people. I am always uplifted watching you two.

  • @user-or1xh1vc8n
    @user-or1xh1vc8n11 ай бұрын

    You asked that someone explain in the comments so please allow me to give it a try in a way I think would help: Coopers daughter noticed something in the bedroom and decided to call it a "ghost". That ghost gave the daughter coordinates to the NASA hidden base. Later in the film, cooper was inside the "3d box" and in that moment, he realized that he was the one that made things happen in his daughters bedroom which caused her to think there was a ghost. So he asked his robot friend who was somewhere else in the 3d box to please give him the coordinates to the hidden NASA base so he can use the 3d box to give that info to his daughter. He also then asked the robot to give him the information readings from inside the black hole. The information that the scientists back home knew they needed in order to get their giant tube shaped hidden base off the ground and into space. (Too big and heavy for rockets, they needed to learn how to "turn off gravity" and make it float). Those scientists assumed that they would never get that info because no one could ever go into a black hole. Coopers black hole adventure was not part of the original plans. But since they were in this black hole and somehow still survived, and also inside a weird magical 3d box, cooper asked for the info and also asked the robot to give it to him in moors code so he could translate that through the watch. Cooper and his young daughter originally only noticed the gravity marks on the floor that forced the dust to make a barcode that had the coordinates to NASA, but they never noticed the watch moving. That watch just kept moving for years and years until the daughter finally came back at her later age to notice it, translate the code of the jumping hand on that watch, and learn how to turn off gravity. But remember the moment I mentioned when cooper looked around inside the 3d box and realized that he was the one who created "ghost events" for his daughter in that room? Well, sometime in the far away future, human beings discovered how to make that 3d box, and in that moment, they realized that they are the ones who helped cooper with a 3d box and a wormhole. You can think of the 3d box as a piece of paper that can be seen by you and also by a man in the year 1855. If you draw a circle on the paper, then that man will see a circle appearing on the paper, like a ghost is making it happen. If that man from 1855 draws a square on the paper, you will start to see a square appearing on the paper in front of you on your coffee table. Again like a ghost. So this piece of paper exists across time, for everyone from all points in time to see simultaneously. Someone from years ago who lived in that house before you would see that piece of paper and witness a circle appearing and then a square appearing and think their house is haunted by ghosts and then move out... So that you can later move in and then start a KZread channel. This piece of paper is gravity. In real life, gravity is the only thing that exists across time the way that piece of paper does.

  • @PhatBoySteven

    @PhatBoySteven

    11 ай бұрын

    Now explain to me like im 5

  • @peterbailey4222
    @peterbailey422211 ай бұрын

    I always pictured a 5th dimentional pov as looking at film cells lined up like dominoes. Each film cell contains our 3 dimensions and represents a single moment in time. Looking through all of the cells at the same time would show you the 4th dimension from a 5th dimensional pov. Some shots of the bookshelf scene represent it really well. P.s. Asia was right. Edmonds planet had breathable air and when Coop left for the black hole, she went on to set up shop with Edmonds. He probs died of old age before she got there.

  • @KrazzeeKane

    @KrazzeeKane

    11 ай бұрын

    Edmunds died of a rock slide, it was confirmed in extra material, and you can see in the film that his grave is a bunch of rocks that are crashed over his freezer, showing the landslide that killed him. He was dead when his site stopped pinging, 3 years before they went came through the wormhole, so about 1 year before Cooper and Brand left Earth.

  • @Big_Tex

    @Big_Tex

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s the rock slide but yeah he WOULD have been dead of old age by the time she got there anyway.

  • @interstellar.overdrive

    @interstellar.overdrive

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Big_Tex No, I think he was waiting for them in cryosleep (like Mann), so he didn't age.

  • @FrankieB
    @FrankieB11 ай бұрын

    One of my favorite movies of all time

  • @itt23r
    @itt23r11 ай бұрын

    The big takeaway from this movie: Never turn your back on Matt Damon.

  • @Young-P
    @Young-P11 ай бұрын

    Each frame of the black hole scene took around 100hrs to render! That's insane

  • @PainInTheS
    @PainInTheS11 ай бұрын

    One of the best movies ever. Could not believe what I saw watching it the first time....watched it again the next day...and many times since. Every time it does a number on me. What a great movie. Makes you think and ponder, it's exciting and has you on your seat without over the top action, hits you in the feels. And then the music....one of those examples where both movie and music even lift each other....perfect unison! MASTERPIECE!

  • @nicoreuel2092
    @nicoreuel209211 ай бұрын

    Asia getting flustered trying to explain stuff is my new favourite thing

  • @nrgmanifest
    @nrgmanifest11 ай бұрын

    I think a 2nd watch will have y'all understanding it a lot more and loving the movie a lot more imvho...one of my favorites!

  • @thedarkknight2221
    @thedarkknight222111 ай бұрын

    *Interstellar is one of the greatest sci-fi films ever made.* This movie genuinely contributed to the scientific community, they actually got 2 research papers published about this. When Christopher Nolan was working on this movie rather than have an “artist’s concept” of what a black hole would look like he worked with a physicist named Kip Thorne and asked him how black holes work. So Kip gave him a bunch of maths, they sent the math to the VFX team, they put it in their render engine (which is far more powerful and expensive than anything that exists in the community) and what it produced was completely unexpected. They knew that a black hole would have what’s known as an accretion disc, but what they didn’t expect as this weird halo effect around it. The VFX team thought it was a bug so they sent it to Kip and he both confirmed that that’s what it would look like and was surprised on how well it looked. This is what a black hole would look like because the gravity is so powerful that it’s pulling light from the other side and causing you to see a second halo because you are seeing the other side of the black hole. And the time dilation is 100% accurate. If you are near something with a strong gravitational pull like a planet larger than earth or a black hole your “clock”, meaning your time, will run slower than on earth. I’m still surprised that 8 years later no one else has used that in a sci-fi movie or tv show. As for the movie itself, it is one of the most emotionally powerful and emotionally draining movies I have ever experienced. The scene of Cooper saying goodbye to his daughter before he leaves always makes me tear up, but when he sees the video messages from his children and sees how they have grown up over the past 23 years, I breakdown in tears and ugly cry just like McConaughy!

  • @ahmedamin1287

    @ahmedamin1287

    11 ай бұрын

    Totally agree, yet the gravity on the first planet that ws closest to the black hole should have impacted them when they landed at least squashing them to the ground of the planet making them non movable but I think Nolan allowed the scene to move on to complete the story. One of the best Scifi films ever !

  • @ec6933
    @ec693311 ай бұрын

    I don't know why, but I've been at KZread addict for like probably 15 years now and subscribe to hundreds of channels and you guys have just become my new favorite. I just appreciate the simplicity the honesty you're just good people. I'm also really appreciative that you do a variety of movies that interest me That's probably a big draw too. Everything from Harry Potter to haunted stuff, if I may recommend my favorite movie of all time it's actually free on KZread called the storm of the century but I don't know if it would be great to review because it's 4 hours long and it can be kind of slow lol but just a thought. It was originally a three-part TV series from Stephen King in 1999 during a winter storm on Valentine's Day.

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose200011 ай бұрын

    Hey Asia and BJ, the 5th dimentional space that Cooper fell into was created by a future version of Cooper. ------ Basically it's a device that lays out time in a linear format so a person could find any point thoughout time. ----- Cooper set it up based around his daughter Murphy's childhood bedroom because that is what dad Cooper can remember via the emotional attachment he has to his daughter. -------- Dad Cooper yes that info about the linear time layout to pass info back to Murphy when she was a child in hopes that she would find it when she was ready to understand it, hopefully as an adult. ----- Some next level concepts for sure, and Chris Nolan is a master at conveying such ideas.

  • @mahliz
    @mahliz11 ай бұрын

    This movie and The Martian was released around the same time, both have Matt Damon and Jessica Chestain in them, and are both amazing human vs space movies.

  • @StayAtHomeGamer9000
    @StayAtHomeGamer90008 ай бұрын

    Time moves differently in higher or lower gravity, compared to other different higher or lower gravity areas. Time and space are connected, and gravity warps it. great reaction, love this movie

  • @michaeldominguez8272
    @michaeldominguez827211 ай бұрын

    You guys understood more watching this for your first time. I was totally lost with this movie, but you guys picked up a lot!👍👍

  • @jameshurley9551
    @jameshurley955111 ай бұрын

    This is one of my favorite movies ever made. I saw it in the theatre and the whole scene with Matt Damon fighting Cooper up through the docking was the most intense movie experience I've ever felt. The music by Hans Zimmer is next level in this one too. Thank for reviewing!!!!

  • @jjiron07
    @jjiron0711 ай бұрын

    So in the beginning when all of the machinery/tractors/drone were malfunctioning, that was TARS in the tesseract trying to communicate with the past Cooper (since TARS entered the black hole a few moments before Cooper did). The tesseract itself was created by higher beings, but like he said in the movie, they couldn't locate a specific place in time to essentially give the humans the information needed to survive. In order to us to reach that higher state, Murph was the one who could solve the equation of gravity for survival, but she couldn't do it without the vital information that TARS had collected when entering Gargantuan. TARS had the data but didn't know how to relay the information, so Cooper was essentially the bridge to get TARS information to Murph, and the tesseract (and wormhole) were placed in order for that to happen, and once he succeeded, the tesseract had no more purpose in which it was closed.

  • @SanctumGamingNetwork
    @SanctumGamingNetwork8 ай бұрын

    This movie is honestly a piece of art in my opinion.

  • @cyruslad5462
    @cyruslad546211 ай бұрын

    Epic movies deserve epic reactions💪 People in the future had advanced so far they were unable to pick a specific point in time to send a message back so needed Cooper to enter the tesseract they made to pick a point in time where he could send the data required to leave earth(gravity). Brant was indeed at the other site and Cooper steals a craft at the end to go get her. Obviously the structures built by her boyfriend were left behind on the planet where he died which is what you see at the end.

  • @ezekielhernand9127

    @ezekielhernand9127

    11 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @csw3287
    @csw328711 ай бұрын

    Let's have the First Re-reaction of a film on the channel! Let's watch it again and see what We missed. Let's do it Y'all!

  • @andrewgarcia4980
    @andrewgarcia498011 ай бұрын

    This movies message is that “love and science” will save us.

  • @janak132
    @janak13211 ай бұрын

    When he sacrificed himself and gave the rest of the ship the necessary energy to travel on, he set Brand on a trajectory for Edmund's world. So Brand landed on Edmund's and because that world is orbiting the black hole gravitational relativity makes time pass a lot slower on that world (and of course in the space she is traversing to get there), like on the other planet; some amount of hours for Brand are days on Earth. So from Brand's point of view she just landed there and set up camp, preparing to launch plan B and grow a whole lot of new colonists. So he left to join her in that endeavor. Because time passes so slowly close to the black hole he will manage to reach Brand in reasonable time from his and her point of view, even if another century may pass back on Earth. (However, they did fumble with the time delay when they visited the planet with the huge tidal waves caused by the black hole. A ship orbiting that world would of course have almost the same time dilation as on the surface of that world. Though yes, tons of time would have passed back on Earth, the guy on the ship shouldn't have aged 20+ years more than them.)

  • @adamwegner2520
    @adamwegner252011 ай бұрын

    Asia’s hair looked so nice for this video. Great movie! One of the better Nolan films.

  • @chriscoombes6751
    @chriscoombes675111 ай бұрын

    It's a bloody brilliant movie isn't it! - best Sci-fi in recent years! : you definitely have to have your head screwed on to keep up with it all (after a few viewings)! Also have to say an absolutely amazing & atmospheric soundtrack too - hats off to Hanz Zimmer & his awesome work on this film!

  • @jeremygray1331
    @jeremygray133111 ай бұрын

    “Rage against the dying of the light” is featured in two movies. This (Interstellar) and Back to School

  • @fudasca
    @fudasca11 ай бұрын

    I can see you both holding back the tears at the end! Good movie :)

  • @Doggeslife
    @Doggeslife11 ай бұрын

    This is a tricky movie to follow because they go deep into real physics. Time dilation and the bending of light via intense gravity, other dimensions beyond the 3 we live in and so on. At the end you may find yourself saying "what just happened?", but you will still enjoy it.

  • @gennyreese420
    @gennyreese42011 ай бұрын

    Yes I'm so glad you guys are doing this today! It's such a great movie, and I currently feel like I am on an alien planet, I live in the desert where we are currently having a tropical f****** hurricane LOL! Hopefully I have internet long enough to watch this with y'all😹💕✌⛈

  • @JITKanno0
    @JITKanno011 ай бұрын

    Coop watching all those vid messages... banging the back of the "bookshelf"- STAY... "because my dad promised me"- all these episodes teared me up! And Zimmer.... oh, maaan

  • @Powick01
    @Powick0111 ай бұрын

    Very Impressed Asia nailed the ending premise in one - respect!

  • @tbob8212
    @tbob821211 ай бұрын

    Matthew McConaughey "That's what I love about these black holes. Everyone gets older, I stay the same age" "Alright, alright!" 😂

  • @michaeldorsey1394
    @michaeldorsey139411 ай бұрын

    You two are great at reacting to movies thanks for this one!

  • @teflonjon3341
    @teflonjon334111 ай бұрын

    Brand went to edmunds because it was what they agreed on, she was supposed to go to Edmunds planet to see if it’s habitable while cooper ended up going into the black hole. Turned out she was correct and edmunds planet had breathable air (hence her taking off the helmet), so once cooper arrives to her they’ll be able to send out a signal that tells the entire colony to come to that planet and human beings can start anew.

  • @felequere
    @felequere8 ай бұрын

    The film's advisor was Kip Thorne, one of the most renowned theoretical astrophysicists.

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose200011 ай бұрын

    Hey Asia and BJ. I know family means the world to you. -------- "Interstellar" takes you on a journey so profound it makes you rethink the ties you have with your family. It makes you ponder to what lengths one would go to in fulfilling a promise to your loved one, especially a child. --------- I believe this is why the movie and its theme of parental love and sacrifice resonate with you so deeply. -------- Great, amazing, heartfelt reaction. You won me over with this one.

  • @bamflyer
    @bamflyer11 ай бұрын

    Hey guys loving the channel and the reactions! Just some friendly feedback, I imagine its hard to decide what to edit out for yt but try to avoid big jumps of time and character building like the parent reacher conference in the beginning. Scenes like that help us gauge you as you start to see the characters and story unfold. All the best, looking forward to more!

  • @matt_canon
    @matt_canon10 ай бұрын

    4:22 The people are so used to the dust that even with the sirens, they're just walking out like "Here we go with this again. Can't have nothing."

  • @daveking9393
    @daveking939311 ай бұрын

    Just what I need take a few minutes to settle back and watch a movie with two great folks Thanks for sharing.

  • @ghostmkc4045
    @ghostmkc404511 ай бұрын

    Im excited for this one, one of my personal favorites. A damm near perfect film.

  • @RumCaptain

    @RumCaptain

    11 ай бұрын

    Uhhh....

  • @dirzz
    @dirzz11 ай бұрын

    Don't let me leave, Murph!

  • @rebeccapeters295
    @rebeccapeters29511 ай бұрын

    Walked out of the theatre after seeing this movie and was absolutely stunned lost for words one of the best movies ever seen ir

  • @Land-Shark
    @Land-Shark11 ай бұрын

    I haven't seen the movie, so I hope I get an "alright, alright, alright..." and "That's what I love about Space Academy, I get older, but the aliens stay the same age."

  • @bryanj.clifford1312
    @bryanj.clifford131211 ай бұрын

    NO way im so happy to see you guys watched this its my favorite!

  • @jakecole4848
    @jakecole48489 ай бұрын

    Alot of people miss this but at the end, Doyl has her helmet off. She found the habitable planet

  • @natel7151
    @natel715111 ай бұрын

    There is so much to unpack in this movie, and it's a credit to you (and to everyone out there who loves this movie) that you want to ask questions after you're done watching. Some movies just leave you asking questions. Having a curious mind, ready with questions - that is a great thing... better than thinking you know it all.

  • @brizzybones7377
    @brizzybones737711 ай бұрын

    Do there’s reaction channels talk to each other? Cuz the two I watch always watch the same movie as the other like 3-4 weeks in a row now 😂

  • @AbeVicious

    @AbeVicious

    11 ай бұрын

    They probably watch or look at each others views. Just like I noticed a BUNCH of reactors reacting to It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia

  • @J4ME5_

    @J4ME5_

    11 ай бұрын

    yes, they all watch each other to see who is having success and where.. just like any successful business should do.. and yes.. this IS a business

  • @martinbraun1211
    @martinbraun121111 ай бұрын

    Please give the Star Trek franchise a chance. 🖖😌

  • @datboidego
    @datboidego11 ай бұрын

    The ending was basically murph was in the past present and future at the same time.

  • @novembercherry4
    @novembercherry411 ай бұрын

    It’s a Chris Nolan Movie. He goes deep in research and thought for his films. That’s why I love his movies. There are other planets out there that should support life by having oxygen out there too. I don’t think we’re the only ones. This was an outstanding movie.

  • @narcisopetty
    @narcisopetty9 ай бұрын

    Special relativity is mind bending. Learning to accept that time isn't consistent is hard to come to. I loved this movie so much when I first saw it, when they showed the depiction of the worm hole entrance I was amazed that they showed it as it would likely appear to us. Our understanding of physics is so close to banging rocks together that it's humbling.

  • @timothyhedrick5295
    @timothyhedrick529511 ай бұрын

    Asia was 150% into this at the end. I've watched people react to this movie at least a dozen times and I still tear up every damn time. And little Murph is just too cute... I would have never left and we would have all just died together without me ever leaving to go anywhere. There is no comprehending the end of this movie. Right now we don't know how to defeat or control gravity. We comprehend existing in three dimensions but can't comprehend four or five dimensions. I read about Quantum physics, quarks, neutrinos,muons, etc, etc, and can barely even begin to try to wrap my head around the concepts. When you watch this movie you just have to accept that 100 or even 50 years from now people are going to look back at our understanding of quantum physics and chuckle the same way we look back at the idea of alchemy and laugh.

  • @chris...9497

    @chris...9497

    11 ай бұрын

    'Little Murph' was played by Mackenzie Foy, who also played Renesmee Cullen in the 2012 film The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn.

  • @crow8283
    @crow828311 ай бұрын

    The ending had everything to do with that handshake that happened in the wormhole .. it was a greeting

  • @Chiefdout4
    @Chiefdout411 ай бұрын

    I think most of us were like you at the end. Can’t even count how many times I’ve rewatched this. Blows my mind everytime.

  • @josephwilliams9209
    @josephwilliams920911 ай бұрын

    That ending….😭. The fact that his daughter stayed alive just to see her dad again. That whole scene 😭

  • @Jokester954
    @Jokester95410 ай бұрын

    50:06 Asia said “that was a hell of a movie…” ♥️♥️

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