Saturday, November 8, 2014

Interstellar

 
 


"We've always defined ourselves by the ability to overcome the impossible."
 
 

Christopher Nolan has done it again. He has restored my faith in the movie industry. He has reminded me what it is that I love about the movies is not at all dead, but alive and well. It is because of this that I saw it fitting to dust off my keyboard and get back to one of the things that I love most- talking about movies. This was a great film to start again with. (I have only watch the movie once.... I will be watching it again....and then probably changing some things only because there was sooooo much to this movie. I am sure that I missed something)
Like every Nolan film, this movie was nothing more then another trip into the human psyche. This time he gives us a glimpse into one the most common and instinctual human needs- survival. That was the heart of this movie. At it's very basic, the story centers around a small group of astronauts attempting to save the human race from extinction.
It is set in the future, I would say maybe 60-100 years based on a conversation between John Lithglow's character and Matthew McConaughey's character. The world has reached a point in which we are being ravaged by these terrible dust storms. These storms have caused many deaths because of all the people breathing in the dust. Earth has begun to turn on us. Our plants keep on dying. Every year a new crop fails to grow. You get a sense that the population has decreased drastically. Nolan does a great job showing us this without telling us.
McConaughey's  character, Cooper, is a former pilot who works on a corn farm with his two children and their grandfather. The movie opens with him having a nightmare because of crashing his plane. We are given a sense that Cooper is much more then a farmer when he takes his children on a case of a drone plane to gather parts. During a meeting with his daughters school teachers, we learn that there is no need in this world for the technology that we use and take for granted everyday. Not one person in this movie had a cell phone.... NOT ONE. There were no computers, no video games, no medical equipment..... NOTHING! Our job as humans is to try and grow food so that we can survive. The need for all of those things that we say are "necessary" is not there. It was an interesting thing to have to think about. At a government level, their answer to helping the human race to survive was to make sure that there are enough farms and farmers to keep to population well fed. A major shift in what we see today.
The opening sequence of the film, like all of Nolan's, was significant. A shot of books on the bookshelf and his daughter, Murph, waking Cooper up about the ghost in her room. I won't talk about what I think about that right now, I'll wait until I know more people have seen the movie. However, the books play an important part in the message that Christopher was trying to get across through the movie. Food is not the only necessary part in our survival as a human race. Knowledge is just as important. There was so much physics in this movie, I wish that I was able to comment on all of the science stuff, but I am not a very science person so I cannot tell you that I even have an understanding of everything yet. I have to watch it again.
Cooper happens to find NASA's hidden underground work station and learns about a mission that they are ready to take. We learn that there have been 12 astronauts sent out into space, another galaxy, to find a new planet that we can survive on. Each astronaut had settled on a new planet, and this new group of explorers was to go out and collect them and their data. Cooper and Amelia, Anne Hathaway, end up with two other men on this mission into the new galaxy while Amelia's father, Micheal Cane, stays behind to try and solve an equation that would get the human population off of earth. If that fails, the people on the ship are instructed to start a new colony using fertilized eggs to ensure the survival of the human race as a whole.
Cooper makes a promise to his daughter Murph before he leaves that he will come back for her. He does not tell her when he will come back, but he promises her that he will return. One of the most interesting parts of this movie was the idea of time and gravity. For those up in space, time is moving at a much slower rate then on earth. Years are passing on earth and it seems like hours and days up in space. Murph has trouble dealing with her father being away. She never even told him goodbye, all she wanted was for him to stay.
This promise to his daughter is what drives Cooper's survival instinct out in the great unknown. He wants nothing more then to get back home to his daughter. Amelia talks to Cooper about the other astronauts  that are waiting on the other planets to be picked back up. She tells him that they all had no families and no attachments. Her father believed that this would be important and allow them to focus on the mission at hand rather then about surviving and getting home to their families.
The group arrive on one of the planets to find one of the scientists, Mann, that had been sent into space years before. He wakes up in tears at the sight of another human being (something that he thought he would never see again). He tells the group that the planet is livable down near the surface. They begin to set things up to start the colony and return home when Mann turns on Cooper while they are out exploring. Mann has lied about all of the data in order to get someone to just come and rescue him. He gives a speech about survival and how we will always fight for it. Even without human attachment, Mann wants nothing more to make it out of this alive, but at what cost. He has no human attachments back on earth, therefore he has nothing to fight for except his own survival. The one thing that Professor Brand thought to be the most essential part for his explorers, turned out to be the most damaging.
While Cooper is influenced by his love and desire to return home to his children, all of his decisions are based on their survival-Not his own. He went on this mission so that they would have a new place to live. It is with this that Cooper is able to make the sound decisions that he does rather then the rash ones in a simple fight for flight manner. He has known his entire life that his actions have consequences for the people around him. Mann only ever had to care about himself. How can a person who has only cared about themselves, ever truly be able to make the decisions necessary to save the entire human population?
I also loved that Nolan did not put aliens into this movie.....I have said before, and I stand by this even now, Aliens are just a copout way to explain the things that are occurring in a movie. Nolan uses the science of black holes and our basic understanding of how they are to work in order to explain what happens throughout the movie. There are no aliens or "they" as Ameila refers to them throughout the movie. It is us and always has been us. This is explain by that folded in half explanation of a black hole and how time is folded against itself....or at least that is the best why I can explain it.
Christopher Nolan does what he does best, and that is bring the movie full circle. There is nothing in this film that was there by accident, and that is what I love so much about watching his movies. I highly recommend taking the 3 hours out of your day and sitting down to watch this. It was brilliantly acted and well shot. The silence when they where in space at times made my skin crawl. You could almost touch the silence it was so thick. It really gave you a sense of what it would be like if you where to end up in space one day.
I will be watching the movie again and then editing this jumble to thoughts, but these where my initial feelings on the story and movie. I loved it. Get lost in space today. It's well worth the journey.
Surviving is built into us as a natural human instinct. This movie touched on the different types of survival instincts. It looked at a person who saw beyond what was in front of them. A person who thought about the survival of the human race as a whole, an sacrificed and lied to all of the people around him because he could see the bigger picture.

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