I would say the ones that give 5 stars

Osbaldo 2022-04-21 09:01:07

Are you grading science films?

Hard science fiction is okay, as long as it is accompanied by a story that is soft enough to allow the popular science concepts involved to unfold naturally around the story, such as Inception, such as gravity. This time, Nolan was hard-boiled. The story itself was too close to the content of popular science, which led to the fact that the film turned the cart before the horse, and the story became an annotation subordinate to popular science.

As a commercial film, this film is also three points. As a Nolan-produced film, this film is at most two points.

View more about Interstellar reviews

Extended Reading
  • Deron 2022-03-23 09:01:07

    Compared with the language of the lens, Nolan's script is always new, perfectly interpreting the ancient people's "like a world away". Like "Future Science Conference", mankind's most selfless family love once again saved mankind itself. Unfortunately, Nolan's sci-fi can't be hardened, he can only play sensational soft sci-fi, but it is still a thousand miles away from the predecessors who pay tribute to him in the film.

  • Chelsea 2022-03-26 09:01:01

    Just... after watching this movie... once out of the theater... and then I saw other movie posters in the hallway... I felt... they were all very meaningless... haha...

Interstellar quotes

  • [first lines]

    Murph: Well, my dad was a farmer. Um, like everybody else back then. Of course, he didn't start that way.

  • Cooper: [Cooper sits to watch the video messages left for him over the years] Cooper.

    Computer: Messages span twenty-three years.

    Cooper: Play from the beginning.

    [message from Tom starts playing]

    Young Tom: Hey, Dad. Checkin' in, sayin' hi. Um... finished second in school, Miss Carlin's still giving me Cs though. Pulled me down, but second's not bad. Grandpa attended the ceremony. Um... oh, I met another girl, dad. I, uh... I really think this is the one. Her name is Lois. That's her right there.

    [Tom holds up a photo of Lois, Cooper, overwhelmed with emotion, begins weeping]

    Young Tom: Murphy stole grandpa's car. She crashed it, she's okay though.

    Tom: [we see another message from Tom showing him as an adult] Hey, Dad. Look at this!

    [Tom holds up his baby next to him]

    Tom: You're a grandpa. His name's Jesse. I kind of wanted to call him Coop, but, Lois says maybe next time.

    Lois: [to Jesse] Say bye-bye Grandpa. Bye-bye Grandpa.

    Tom: [Cooper continues to watch his messages, the next one shows Tom looking despondent] Sorry it's been a while. Just... what with Jesse and all. Uh... grandpa died last week. We buried him out in the back plot next to mom and... Jesse. Just where we would've buried you if you'd ever... come back. Murph was there at the funeral. We don't see her that much, but she came for that.

    Tom: [Tom hesitates] You're not listening to this, I know that. All these messages are just... drifting out there in the darkness. Lois says that, uh... I have to let you go. And, uh... so, I guess... I'm letting you go. I don't know where you are, Dad. But I hope that wherever you are you're at peace. Goodbye.

    [Tom turns off the camera, Cooper touches the screen not wanting to let go when suddenly a message from a now adult Murph comes up]