Saturday, December 1, 2018

Interstellar: Final Blog Post



What has to be one of my favorite science fiction films of all time, and possibly my favorite cli-fi film of this decade, Interstellar is a beautiful tale of family and humankind at its tipping point. It shows us the best and worst of humanity in the diarist of circumstances. Directed by Christopher Nolan, and featuring an incredible cast, the film is an exploration of the human psyche and outer space. It's a film that has been crafted with great love and care.  Theoretical physicist Kip Thorne was even brought on to work a scientific adviser to ensure that they got most of the science correct, with a little bit of breathing space for artistic license.
 The premise of the film is that the Earth has been corrupted to the point that nothing will be able to grow on its soil. Faced with the possible destruction of our species, a secret project was being developed to preserve humankind. Coinciding with the decay of our planet, a black hole had been discovered 48 years prior to the present day on the other side of which was essentially a distant solar system. This led NASA to commence work on a Lazarus mission. This sent 12 astronauts to 12 separate worlds that had been located through the wormhole. All of which may serve as possible substitutes for another Earth. Unfortunately, with limited resources, it was a one-way trip. The astronauts had two years’ worth of life in their capsules which would enable them to work for multiple years using the sleep chambers to hibernate for most of their time to conserve food and resources. If the right conditions for habitation were discovered, the astronauts were instructed to turn on a beacon. This would inform NASA to send their subsequent Endurance mission to that location. Those who had landed on each of the planets that had no potential for life had to accept their fate and essentially die alone; even those that had discovered a planet with potential for life had no guarantee that the Endurance would be able to travel to them and pick them up.
The second part of the plan was to send a follow-up crew to confirm the discoveries and begin the setup of equipment to facilitate the first habitation of our species on another world. It's explained that only three, of the twelve, planets had sent a beacon back to Earth leading Cooper, a retired NASA pilot with the most flying experience of anyone currently available, Amelia Brand a scientist, Doyle a geographer, and Romilly an astrophysicist to investigate each of the three planets.
With 5,000 fertilized eggs and equipment to incubate their growth with which they can colonize a habitable planet and ensure the survival of our species, they make it through the wormhole safely. Now, the three planets that they are going to head to are Miller's, Edmunds, and Dr. Mann's planets.  The first stop is Miller’s planet. With no time to lose, due to the proximity to the black hole, every hour on this planet equals 7 years pass by on Earth.
  Brand, Cooper, and Doyle step off the Endurance onto Miller's planet. They see mountains in the foreground, but everything near them in submerged in shallow water. Brand finds the beacon half submerged and runs to collect it.  Cooper soon realizes that these mountains are actually waves coming in on them, so they rush back to the spacecraft.  Doyle does not make back in time and succumbs to the waves. While this scene lasts for about five minutes, 23 Earth years pass due to the time discrepancy.
The Endurance bolts and is now set to the next planet. On the second planet, they find Dr. Mann, a member of the doomed crew who tried to find a habitable planet. After they awake him from the long nap, they soon realize, although too late, that he has to some degree lost his mind and attempts to sabotage their intention to leave the planet. Dr. Mann creates an explosion that kills Romilly, now the crew must escape. They take Dr. Mann’s robot CASE, and then set off to leave the planet.  With little fuel left, Brand and Cooper, along with the robots TARS and CASE, try slingshotting around the black hole to reach the third and final planet. There isn't enough momentum for the plan to work with the ship at its current weight, so Cooper and tars eject into a small lander from the ship to allow Brand and CASE to reach the third planet alone. Cooper then ejects from the lander and falls into the horizon of the black hole entering the unknown once more.

Apparently alive and intact, Cooper finds himself inside another dimension constructed of an endless array of his daughter’s bedroom.  He can weakly manipulate Murphy’s bookshelf from the outside and conveys a message in Morse code, the same message that led Cooper and Murphy to NASA at the beginning of the film.  Then he re-establishes his contact with TARS and begins to piece together a plan to save the world. Professor Brand’s primary goal on Earth was to solve a gravitational equation that could enable humanity to leave the planet and to journey to their new home in the new galaxy.  Without the answers to this equation, the Earth is doomed, and only the scientist who traveled through the black hole could continue human life. Cooper decides to code the watch that he left his daughter with the answer to the quantum equation, related to him by TARS, into the second hand's movements, knowing that eventually one day, she would figure it out.  Of course, she does determine the message.  Then the dimension begins to collapse.  We see Cooper presumably traveling through a wormhole as he reaches out to brand in a scene we saw earlier when the crew first traveled through the wormhole to get to the new galaxy. He then ends up unconscious and floating in space, near Saturn where the wormhole first originated. Waking up on a space station appropriately named “Cooper station,” he finds himself far into the future and reunites with his daughter Murphy in the final stages of her old age.  Murphy urges him to find Dr. Brand.  He takes off back into space, on his way to Edmund’s Planet to save Dr. Brand, little does he know she is alive and colonizing new life.
                Quiz Questions:
1.       How many planets is the Endurance going to visit?
a.       3 Planets
2.       How many years pass per hour on Dr. Miller’s planet?
a.       7 Earth Years
3.       What is the name of the astronaut found on the second planet?
a.       Dr. Mann
4.       Who are the two surviving crew members?
a.       Cooper and Dr. Brand
Discussion Questions:
1.       Are we ready for space exploration on a broad scale?
2.       Does love transcend space and time?
3.       Can you foresee us trying to inhabit a new planet?
4.       Murphy felt abandonment issues all her life after her father left, do you think those last moments of her life with him would have helped mend the wound of loss?

7 comments:

  1. This movie has a really great plot twist, it brings you to tears. Cooper really regrets his decision after he finally discovers himself as the one sending his daughter the message "Stay." The audience knows if had stayed his daughter Murphy, he would have seen her grow up. I like the idea of his message transcending time in space to be delivered, its a very amazing concept. In the end, Dr. Brand could have went by herself and inhabited a planet. She sort of does everything eventually, and she's just a good a pilot as her male counter-part. Really, his emotions sort of bother his character too much but because Dr. Brand has no one to come home to, she makes this project her #1 goal and finishes the movie out. Cooper wanted to be home the whole time, he really shouldn't have left his family to the responsibility of a dying grand-father. When his son grows up, they lose contact. Cooper, in my opinion, does not save humanity.

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  2. "Are we ready for space exploration on a broad scale?"

    No

    Will we ever be? Hope so.

    Does the physics of Interstellar hold up? Don't know. What do you think?

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  3. This seems like a very interesting concept and I would love to watch the movie at some point. I like the use of family as a motivator to find a sustainable future. Often we tell ourselves that we won't be the ones that will have to deal with the environmental consequences of our actions, but this movie seems to drive home the point that the younger generations will be stuck with a dying world. Although in Interstellar the threat is much more drastic, Cooper's goal is to save his children and the generation to come. I believe that we shouldn't wait until drastic measures need to be taken, but instead continuously work towards a better world. Relocating to a new planet may seem appealing, but we already have a beautiful world that just needs to be taken care of. I hope we will never need to colonize another planet, but will be able to appreciate what we already have and take the time to reverse the damages we have caused.

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  4. This movie was amazingly written, acted, visual effected movie for a cli-fi. This movie was the best movie I have ever seen. Matthew McConaughey made the movie and brought his best performance of his lifetime. Anne Hathaway was an amazing supporting actress and compared to her performance in Les Miserables, I have no idea how she didn't get an Oscar for this. The visual effects were more than just Oscar worthy. They were pioneering. I have never seen anything like it. One thing I would recommend is having a little previous knowledge about space. Not like Einstein stuff though. I would recommend you see this movie as fast as you can if you are a Nolan fan or not. I give this movie a rating of 97 out of 100.

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  5. This movie was very well written and the cast did a great job. This is one of my favorite climate fiction films. It is definitely a good possibility for the future if something were to happen and we could no longer live on Earth. We as humans have no idea what's out in space, whether there are other life-forms, or other planets that would be habitable. Although, I doubt it's something that would happen in our life time, it's still good to think about.

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  6. Not gonna lie, I was forced to Interstellar in middle school and have had a horrible opinion of it ever since. After reading your post and listening to your presentation, I will definitely be watching it again soon. I do not believe that we currently hold enough knowledge or responsibility to explore space on a larger scale, but I also believe space exploration is inevitable with growing technological resources. Given the time, I believe mankind will explore explore as much of outerspace as possible.

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  7. I had never seen this movie until I decided to watch it based on how you described it in your presentation. I really like the point you made about how it showed that love could over come all things. I really liked all the different portrays of the potential planet environments. I strange how this movie or at least the part of use being forced to like to the stars for our future is so relevant when you evaluate today's environment and where we are heading.

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