Time is a circle, just like Matthew McConaughey said in True Detective. But it isn't flat. It's spherical.
Interstellar,
Christopher Nolan's saline-and-starlight-streaked space-time epic, is
so beautiful and ambitious and enveloping that to tick down its
imperfections — drippy homilies about how love, especially the paternal
kind, can transcend dimensions; an over-investment in its widower
McCona-hero's Chuck Yeager/Han Solo-esque expertise on the stick; abuse
of a familiar Dylan Thomas quote — ultimately feels small. Released the
week after two spaceflight disasters, one of them fatal, the movie is at
once a hardscrabble vision of humanity's darkest night (it opens with
talking-head clips from Ken Burns' 2012 PBS documentary The Dust Bowl
cannily blended with new footage) and a forceful — if not wholly
convincing — declaration that we shall outlive our home planet. Human
Exceptionalism, you might call its philosophy.
And yet of all the (not that many) kinda-sorta-plausible-ish space exploration flicks to launch since 2001: A Space Odyssey — which predated Neil Armstrong's historic moonwalk by more than a year — Interstellar
is the most mercilessly awe-inducing. Even if you gag on its payload of
sentiment, as many have and shall, it is the film of 2014 that demands
to be experienced on the biggest screen available. Nolan would prefer
that you see it in 70mm IMAX if you can; Paramount is making a
well-publicized exception to its recent switch to exclusively digital
exhibition formats just for him. That's what three wildly successful
Bat-movies buy you.
In the scenario cooked up by Nolan's
brother Jonathan, with an intellectual kick-start from astrophysicist
Kip Thorne, our spendthrift 20th century ways have caught up with us in
the unspecified middle or late 21st. Global famine and food wars have
drastically thinned our herd. Militaries have disbanded (say what?), and
almost everyone — even hotshot former test pilots like our man Cooper,
who remembers the Good Old Days even though he's only in his 40s — works
the land, which now yields only corn.
NASA is a secret
organization led by Michael Caine, Nolan's go-to man for gravitas. In
fact, his character is literally a gravity expert, one who has spent
decades trying to crack an equation that will enable humanity's
migration to Somewhere Else. What's more, his team — Anne Hathaway,
David Gyasi and Wes Bentley, plus a sarcastic military-surplus robot
voiced and manipulated, at least in some scenes, by the brilliant,
elastic-limbed clown Bill Irwin — have identified a dozen potentially
habitable planets accessible via wormhole, those express lanes across
the cosmos that Thorne has theorized. NASA's best guess is that the
wormhole and the planets were put there for us by extraterrestrial
intellects vast, cool and weirdly sympathetic. But they need Cooper's
Right Stuff to get to Saturn, where the wormhole is. It's unclear who
was going to handle the driving if an eventually explained series of
mysterious portents hadn't led Cooper and Murph, his 10-year-old budding
genius daughter, to their secret lair.
The Earthbound first
act feels a lot like the Spielberg picture this was once set to be.
(Also like M. Night Shyamalan's thriller Signs, starring
America's favorite stoic widower circa 2002, Mel Gibson.) As with every
Nolan movie, there's a clockwork narrative logic to it that eventually
reveals itself, even if your willing suspension of disbelief has burned
up by then.
Anyway, Cooper must leave behind his two kids —
Murph and Tom, her less gifted big brother — to try to save the species.
Kubrick wouldn't have wasted a tear on an equation as lopsided as that,
but Nolan turns on the waterworks (and Hans Zimmer's church-organ
score), cutting from the bereft Cooper's drive away from his Norman
Rockwell-esque house to the countdown of his rocket. It's the first of
many bravura dialogue-free moments that make Interstellar's 169
minutes feel ... well, like less than 169 minutes. (I saw it twice in
three days and I was never bored.) Here's another: Their spacecraft,
bearing the weary designation Endurance, pinwheels across the rings of Saturn while we hear the thunderstorm-sounds recording Gyasi is playing on his headphones.
I
wouldn't have minded a bit if Nolan had lingered on these space vistas
more than he does. (Cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema, of Let the Right One In and Her,
has composed frames well worth the extra few bucks to see them in true
IMAX.) But he's got a supermassive (and highly spoilable) story to tell,
one that keeps him rushing even given the lengthy run time. One thing
Kubrick never was was hurried.
Iceland stands in for a
pair of beautiful, forbidding planets, but its most stunning
environments are computer visualizations born of legit science: Thorne
gave the film's army of digital effects artists the equations to
visualize both the wormhole and the black hole seen in the film, leading
to breakthroughs in "gravitational lensing." Nolan had reserved the
right to assert artistic license if the images Thorne's equations
produced were too plain or simply too weird for audiences to process,
but the objects his data generated — a shiny black soap-bubble in space,
and a black hole with a fiery halo of starlight wrapped around it like
the string of a yo-yo — are what we see. "This is our observational
data," Thorne told Wired magazine.
"That's the way nature behaves. Period." (This is not to say others
don't take issue with the science on the whole, as astronomer Phil Plait
does in Slate.)
Nolan made his name with Memento,
a tricksy mystery that moved in two temporal directions at once. In the
14 years since, his movies have swollen to monumental scale, but he
still compresses and elongates the fourth dimension more poetically than
any other blockbuster-maker. Who better than him to make a film dealing
so explicitly with relativity?
Other good sci-fi pictures have addressed the existential, sanity-testing loneliness of sailing across eternity in a can. Interstellar
does that, too, but it's probably the first presumptive blockbuster to
grapple, even clumsily, with the problem that everyone you loved back on
your home world would almost certainly grow to surpass you in age. (It
takes two years in cryo-sleep just to get to the wormhole, apart from
the time-dilation problem.) Some of the consequences of this make for
stirring, emotional stuff, even if the movie isn't as profound as it
wants us to believe.
Nolan, a director often accused of
coldness, finally got all mushy when he went to outer space. I can't
solve that equation, but I've enjoyed trying to scratch it out.
Movie Info
With our time on Earth coming to an end, a team of explorers undertakes the most important mission in human history; traveling beyond this galaxy to discover whether mankind has a future among the stars. (C) Paramount- Rating:
- PG-13 (for some intense perilous action and brief strong language)
- Genre:
- Action & Adventure , Science Fiction & Fantasy
- Directed By:
- Christopher Nolan
- Written By:
- Christopher Nolan , Jonathan Nolan
- In Theaters:
- Nov 7, 2014 Wide
- Runtime:
நன்றி-http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/interstellar_2014/
There have been many reviewers and critics alike that have high praise for the film (the visual effects, the acting, the music), but say how it's not Christopher Nolan's best directed film. This is where i personally would have to disagree. Before i get into it, though, i'll talk about Interstellar a bit.
Interstellar is truly a sci-fi epic like no other. To compare said film to '2001: A Space Odyssey' isn't just a disservice, but unnecessary. The films are almost nothing alike, simply sharing small plot elements. Also, Stanley Kubrick's vision of Arthur C. Clarke's sci-fi epic wasn't to ponder the philosophical questions that accompanied the story, but to make art, and art is was, and is. With Interstellar, Mr. Nolan set out to make his most personal and emotional film to date about love and time (time being a recurring theme throughout all of Nolan's films). But it's so much more than that too. There are no words to express the epic journey Nolan takes us on in the film, but needless to say, it's tear-jerking and emotional throughout. The acting is top-notch, especially McConaughey, who gives (I would say) his most emotional performance yet. But the actor who stole the show in a few scenes (one in particular, when they're on an alien planet) was David Gyasi as Romilly, one of the astronauts aboard the Endurance, their spacecraft. The musical score from Hans Zimmer is, without a doubt, his best and most influential work to date, helping drive the film's bold and breath-taking vision (the church organ helped significantly). The visual effects are easily the best to date as well, and of the year. To see a black hole created through visual effects in such a way, with pages theoretical equations provided by Kip Thorne (theoretical physicist, of whom's work inspired the film's genesis); what you see in the film is the most realistic depiction of a black hole, and even offered new insight to accretion discs surrounding the anomalies. But even everything else, from the alien planets to the Endurance, the visuals always look real. Then, there's the writing. I would definitely have to say this has some of the best dialogue i've ever heard in a sci-fi movie, and the script continually pours or oozes emotion, keeping the audience tethered to the film.
Now, about Mr. Nolan. Don't just look at Nolan, but look at his films. Some say Inception would be his masterpiece, while others would say it's The Dark Knight, or Memento. But honestly, every single film Christopher Nolan has directed is a masterpiece not of its genre, but of Nolan. Following is his quiet masterpiece, not the film that put Mr. Nolan on the map as a phenomenal director, but one people visited or revisited after becoming accustomed to Nolan, after seeing Memento, what could be called his breakout masterpiece. Then, right after, he directed the remake of the Norwegian thriller, Insomnia. This, too, could be considered a masterpiece, even if a remake. Then, we were given his take on the Batman universe, starting with Batman Begins, the origin masterpiece. Then, there's The Prestige, adapted from the novel of the same name, which can be called his dark masterpiece. The Dark Knight, his bold masterpiece; Inception, his complex masterpiece, and The Dark Knight Rises, his flawed masterpiece. Now, we have Interstellar, his emotional or personal masterpiece.
This is just my looking at Nolan and his films, but whatever your thoughts are, you can't deny Interstellar is one hell of a journey. He certainly is one of the best filmmakers of our time, and of all time. I can't wait to see what he does next, but i'm not sure it will be as emotionally powerful as Interstellar.
நன்றி-http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0816692/