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With insufficient fuel, they resort to a [[Gravity assist|slingshot]] around Gargantua. In the process, Cooper and TARS must jettison their landers to allow Brand and CASE to reach Edmunds' planet. Falling into the [[event horizon]] of Gargantua, they eject from their craft and find themselves in a [[tesseract]], possibly constructed by humans in the far future. Cooper can see through the bookcases of Murphy's room on Earth, across time, and weakly interact with its gravity. He realizes that he is now (and was) Murphy's "ghost". He uses [[Morse code]] to manipulate the second hand of the wristwatch he gave her before he left, giving Murphy the quantum data that TARS collected, which she needs to solve Professor Brand's gravitational equations.
With insufficient fuel, they resort to a [[Gravity assist|slingshot]] around Gargantua. In the process, Cooper and TARS must jettison their landers to allow Brand and CASE to reach Edmunds' planet. Falling into the [[event horizon]] of Gargantua, they eject from their craft and find themselves in a [[tesseract]], possibly constructed by humans in the far future. Cooper can see through the bookcases of Murphy's room on Earth, across time, and weakly interact with its gravity. He realizes that he is now (and was) Murphy's "ghost". He uses [[Morse code]] to manipulate the second hand of the wristwatch he gave her before he left, giving Murphy the quantum data that TARS collected, which she needs to solve Professor Brand's gravitational equations.


The tesseract, its purpose completed, collapses and ejects Cooper and TARS. Cooper wakes on a huge [[space habitat|station]], the [[namesake]] of his daughter, orbiting Saturn. He reunites with his daughter, now an old woman nearing death, who was able to develop the gravitational propulsion theory. Murphy reminds Cooper that Amelia Brand is out there alone. Cooper and TARS take a spacecraft to rejoin Brand and CASE, who are setting up a human colony on Edmunds' habitable planet.
The tesseract, its purpose completed, collapses and ejects Cooper and TARS. Cooper wakes on a huge [[space habitat|station]], the [[namesake]] of his daughter, orbiting Saturn. He reunites with his daughter, now an old woman nearing death, who was able to develop the gravitational propulsion theory. Murphy reminds Cooper that Amelia Brand is out there alone. Cooper and TARS take a spacecraft to rejoin Brand and CASE, who are setting up a human colony on Edmunds' habitable planet. And the Earth is flat.


==Cast==
==Cast==

Revision as of 19:54, 7 February 2018

Interstellar
Theatrical release poster
Directed byChristopher Nolan
Written by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyHoyte van Hoytema
Edited byLee Smith
Music byHans Zimmer
Distributed by
Release dates
  • October 26, 2014 (2014-10-26) (TCL Chinese Theatre)
  • November 5, 2014 (2014-11-05) (United States)
  • November 7, 2014 (2014-11-07) (United Kingdom)
Running time
169 minutes[1]
Countries
  • Vereinigte Staaten
  • Vereinigtes Königreich
Budget$165 million[2]
Box office$675.1 million[2]

Interstellar is a 2014 science fiction film directed, co-written, and co-produced by Christopher Nolan. It stars Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, Bill Irwin, Ellen Burstyn, and Michael Caine. Set in a dystopian future where humanity is struggling to survive, the film follows a group of astronauts who travel through a wormhole in search of a new home for humanity.

Brothers Christopher and Jonathan Nolan wrote the screenplay, which had its origins in a script Jonathan developed in 2007. Nolan produced Interstellar with his wife, Emma Thomas, through their production company Syncopy, and with Lynda Obst through Lynda Obst Productions. Caltech theoretical physicist Kip Thorne was an executive producer, acted as scientific consultant, and wrote a tie-in book, The Science of Interstellar. Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros., and Legendary Pictures co-financed the film. Cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema shot it on 35 mm in anamorphic format and IMAX 70 mm. Principal photography began in late 2013 and took place in Alberta (Canada), Iceland and Los Angeles. Interstellar uses extensive practical and miniature effects and the company Double Negative created additional digital effects.

Interstellar premiered on October 26, 2014, in Los Angeles. In the United States, it was first released on film stock, expanding to venues using digital projectors. The film had a worldwide gross of over $675 million, making it the tenth-highest-grossing film of 2014, and received critical praise for its themes, visual effects, score and performances. Scientists criticized the implausibility of a blight reducing the Earth's oxygen, while the portrayal of wormholes and black holes was complimented. At the 87th Academy Awards, the film won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects, and was nominated for Best Original Score, Best Sound Mixing, Best Sound Editing and Best Production Design.

Plot

In the mid-21st century, crop blights and dust storms threaten humanity's survival. Joseph Cooper, a widowed former NASA pilot, runs a farm with his father-in-law, son Tom, and daughter Murphy. Living in a post-truth society, Cooper is reprimanded for telling Murphy that the Apollo missions were not fake, and encourages her to carefully observe and record what she sees. They discover that dust patterns, which Murphy first attributes to a ghost, result from gravity variations, and translate into geographic coordinates. These lead them to a secret NASA facility headed by Cooper's former supervisor, Professor John Brand, who explains that 48 years earlier a wormhole appeared near Saturn, opening a path to a distant galaxy with twelve potentially habitable planets located near a black hole named Gargantua. Volunteers had previously traveled through the wormhole to evaluate the planets, with Miller, Edmunds, and Mann reporting back desirable results. Plan A attempts to develop a new gravitational propulsion theory, allowing a mass exodus from Earth. Plan B is a conventional launch of the Endurance spacecraft with 5,000 frozen embryos to colonize a habitable planet and ensure humanity's survival. Cooper is recruited to pilot the Endurance and accepts against Murphy's wishes. When she refuses to see him off, he leaves her his wristwatch to compare their relative time when he returns.

The crew consists of Cooper, the robots TARS and CASE, and the scientists Dr. Amelia Brand (Professor Brand's daughter), Romilly, and Doyle. After traversing the wormhole, Cooper, Doyle, and Brand use a lander to investigate Miller's planet, where time is severely dilated. After landing in knee-high water and finding only wreckage from Miller's expedition, a gigantic tidal wave waterlogs the lander's engines, killing Doyle in the process. By the time the engines restart, Cooper and Brand discover that 23 years have elapsed on the Endurance. Having enough fuel for only one of the other two planets, they vote to go to Mann's, as he is still broadcasting. En route, they receive messages from Earth. Murphy Cooper is now a scientist working on Plan A. On his deathbed, Professor Brand revealed to her that Plan B was his only real plan, knowing that Plan A was not feasible without observations of gravitational singularities from within a black hole.

At Mann's planet, they revive him from cryostasis. He assures them colonization is possible, despite an extreme environment. On an excursion, Mann attempts to kill Cooper and reveals that he falsified the data in the hope of being rescued. He steals Cooper's lander and heads for the Endurance. While a booby trap set by Mann kills Romilly, Brand rescues Cooper with the other lander and they race to the Endurance. Mann is killed in a failed manual docking operation, severely damaging the Endurance. Through a difficult docking maneuver, Cooper regains control.

With insufficient fuel, they resort to a slingshot around Gargantua. In the process, Cooper and TARS must jettison their landers to allow Brand and CASE to reach Edmunds' planet. Falling into the event horizon of Gargantua, they eject from their craft and find themselves in a tesseract, possibly constructed by humans in the far future. Cooper can see through the bookcases of Murphy's room on Earth, across time, and weakly interact with its gravity. He realizes that he is now (and was) Murphy's "ghost". He uses Morse code to manipulate the second hand of the wristwatch he gave her before he left, giving Murphy the quantum data that TARS collected, which she needs to solve Professor Brand's gravitational equations.

The tesseract, its purpose completed, collapses and ejects Cooper and TARS. Cooper wakes on a huge station, the namesake of his daughter, orbiting Saturn. He reunites with his daughter, now an old woman nearing death, who was able to develop the gravitational propulsion theory. Murphy reminds Cooper that Amelia Brand is out there alone. Cooper and TARS take a spacecraft to rejoin Brand and CASE, who are setting up a human colony on Edmunds' habitable planet. And the Earth is flat.

Cast

Production

Development and financing

The premise for Interstellar was conceived by producer Lynda Obst and theoretical physicist Kip Thorne, who collaborated on the film Contact (1997), and had known each other since Carl Sagan set them up on a blind date.[3][4] The two conceived of a scenario, based on Thorne's work, about "the most exotic events in the universe suddenly becoming accessible to humans," and attracted filmmaker Steven Spielberg's interest in directing.[5] The film began development in June 2006, when Spielberg and Paramount Pictures announced plans for a science fiction film based on an eight-page treatment written by Obst and Thorne. Obst was attached to produce the film, which Variety said would "take several years to come together" before Spielberg directed it.[6][7] By March 2007, Jonathan Nolan was hired to write a screenplay.[8]

Spielberg moved his production studio DreamWorks from Paramount to Walt Disney Studios in 2009, and Paramount needed a new director for Interstellar. Jonathan Nolan recommended his brother Christopher, who joined the project in 2012.[9] Christopher Nolan met with Thorne, then attached as executive producer, to discuss the use of spacetime in the story.[10] In January 2013, Paramount and Warner Bros. announced that Christopher Nolan was in negotiations to direct Interstellar.[11] Nolan said he wanted to encourage the goal of human spaceflight.[12] He intended to write a screenplay based on his own idea that he would merge with his brother's screenplay.[13] By the following March, Nolan was confirmed to direct Interstellar, which would be produced under his label Syncopy and Lynda Obst Productions.[14] Stephen Galloway of The Hollywood Reporter said Nolan would earn a salary of $20 million against 20% of what Interstellar grossed; a final total of approximately $121 million.[15] To research for the film, Nolan visited NASA as well as the private space program at SpaceX.[10]

Though Paramount and Warner Bros. are traditionally rival studios, Warner Bros., which released Nolan's Batman films, and works with Nolan's Syncopy, sought a stake in Nolan's production of Interstellar from Paramount. Warner Bros. agreed to give Paramount its rights to co-finance the next film in the Friday the 13th horror franchise, and to have a stake in a future film based on the TV series South Park. Warner Bros. also agreed to let Paramount co-finance "a to-be-determined A-list Warners (sic) property."[16] In August 2013, Legendary Pictures finalized an agreement with Warner Bros. to finance approximately 25% of the film's production. Although it failed to renew its eight-year production partnership with Warner Bros., Legendary reportedly agreed to forego financing for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) in exchange for the stake in Interstellar.[17]

Writing and casting

The Dust Bowl phenomena of the 1930s, as documented by Ken Burns in The Dust Bowl, served as inspiration for the blight.

Screenwriter Jonathan Nolan worked on the script for four years.[3] To learn the scientific aspects, he studied relativity at the California Institute of Technology.[18] Jonathan said he was pessimistic about the Space Shuttle program ending, and how NASA lacked financing for a manned mission to Mars. Jonathan found inspiration in science fiction films with apocalyptic themes, such as WALL-E (2008) and Avatar (2009). Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly commented: "He set the story in a dystopian future ravaged by blight but populated with hardy folk who refuse to bow to despair."[9] His brother Christopher had worked on other science fiction scripts, but decided to take the Interstellar script and choose among the vast array of ideas presented by Jonathan and Thorne, picking what he felt, as director, he could get "across to the audience and hopefully not lose them," before he merged it with a script he had worked on for years on his own.[10][19] Christopher kept in place Jonathan's conception of the first hour, which is set on a resource-depleted Earth in the near future. The setting was inspired by the Dust Bowl that took place in the United States during the Great Depression in the 1930s. He revised the rest of the script, where a team travels into space, instead.[3] After watching the 2012 documentary The Dust Bowl for inspiration, Christopher contacted director Ken Burns and producer Dayton Duncan, requesting permission to use some of their featured interviews in Interstellar, which was granted.[20]

Christopher Nolan wanted an actor who could bring to life his vision of Coop being an everyman character with whom "the audience could experience the story."[21] Nolan said he became interested in casting Matthew McConaughey after watching him in an early cut of the 2012 film Mud,[21] which he had seen as a friend of one of its producers, Aaron Ryder.[3] Nolan went to visit McConaughey while he was filming for the TV series True Detective.[22] Nolan invited Anne Hathaway to his home, where she read the script for Interstellar.[23] Paramount announced in April 2013 that both actors were cast in the film's starring roles.[24] Jessica Chastain was contacted while she was working on Miss Julie (2014) in Northern Ireland, and a script was delivered to her.[23] Matt Damon was cast in late August 2013 in a supporting role and completed filming his scenes in Iceland.[25]

Principal photography

Nolan filmed Interstellar with anamorphic 35 mm and IMAX 70 mm photography.[26] Cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema was hired for Interstellar, as Wally Pfister, Nolan's cinematographer on all of his past films, was making his directorial debut working on Transcendence (2014).[27] IMAX cameras were used for Interstellar more than for any of Nolan's previous films. To minimize the use of computer-generated imagery, the director had practical locations built, such as the interior of a space shuttle.[21] Van Hoytema retooled an IMAX camera to be hand held for shooting interior scenes.[3] Some of the film's sequences were shot with an IMAX camera installed in the nosecone of a Learjet.[28]

Nolan, who is known for keeping details of his productions secret, strove to ensure secrecy for Interstellar. Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Ben Fritz stated, "The famously secretive filmmaker has gone to extreme lengths to guard the script to ... Interstellar, just as he did with the blockbuster Dark Knight trilogy."[29] As one security measure, Interstellar was filmed under the name Flora's Letter,[30] Flora being one of Nolan's four children with producer Emma Thomas.[10]

The Svínafellsjökull glacier in Iceland was used as a filming location for Interstellar, doubling for Mann's planet.

The film's principal photography was scheduled to last four months.[25] It began on August 6, 2013, in the province of Alberta, Canada.[17] Towns in Alberta where shooting took place included Nanton, Longview, Lethbridge, Fort Macleod, and Okotoks. In Okotoks, filming took place at the Seaman Stadium and the Olde Town Plaza.[30] For a cornfield scene, production designer Nathan Crowley planted 500 acres (200 hectares) of corn that would be destroyed in an apocalyptic dust storm scene,[9] intended to be similar to storms experienced during the Dust Bowl in the 1930s United States.[10] Additional scenes involving the dust storm and McConaughey's character were also shot in Fort Macleod, where the giant dust clouds were created on location using large fans to blow cellulose-based synthetic dust through the air.[31] Filming in the province lasted until September 9, 2013, and involved hundreds of extras in addition to 130 crew members, most of whom were local.[30]

Shooting also took place in Iceland, where Nolan had previously filmed scenes for Batman Begins (2005).[32] The location was chosen to represent two extraterrestrial planets: one covered in ice, and the other covered in water.[3] The crew transported mock spaceships weighing about 10,000 pounds (4,500 kg) to the country.[10] They spent two weeks shooting there,[25] during which a crew of approximately 350 people, including 130 locals, worked on the film. Locations included the Svínafellsjökull glacier and the town of Klaustur.[33][34] While filming a water scene in Iceland, Hathaway almost suffered hypothermia because the dry suit she was wearing had not been properly secured.[10]

After the schedule in Iceland was completed, the crew moved to Los Angeles to shoot for 54 days. Filming locations included the Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Suites, the Los Angeles Convention Center, a Sony Pictures soundstage in Culver City, and a private residence in Altadena, California.[35] Principal photography concluded in December 2013, and Nolan started editing the film for its release in 2014.[36] Production was completed with a budget of $165 million, $10 million less than what was allotted by Paramount, Warner Bros., and Legendary Pictures.[10]

Production design

The Endurance spacecraft (left) is based on the International Space Station (right).

Interstellar features three spacecrafts: the Ranger, the Endurance, and the Lander. The Ranger's function is similar to the Space Shuttle's, being able to enter and exit planetary atmospheres. The Endurance, the crew's mother ship, has a circular structure formed by 12 capsules: four with planetary colonization equipment, four with engines, and four with the permanent functions of cockpit, medical labs, and habitation. Production designer Nathan Crowley said the Endurance was based on the International Space Station: "It's a real mish-mash of different kinds of technology. You need analogue stuff as well as digital stuff, you need back-up systems and tangible switches. It's really like a submarine in space. Every inch of space is used, everything has a purpose." Lastly, the Lander transports the capsules with colonization equipment to planetary surfaces. Crowley compared it to "a heavy Russian helicopter."[3]

The film also features two robots, CASE and TARS (as well as a dismantled third robot, KIPP). Nolan wanted to avoid making the robots anthropomorphic and chose a 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) quadrilateral design. The director said: "It has a very complicated design philosophy. It's based on mathematics. You've got four main blocks and they can be joined in three ways. So you have three combinations you follow. But then within that, it subdivides into a further three joints. And all the places we see lines—those can subdivide further. So you can unfold a finger, essentially, but it's all proportional." Actor Bill Irwin voiced and physically controlled both robots, but his image was digitally removed from the film, and actor Josh Stewart's voice replaced his voicing for CASE.[3] The human space habitats resemble O'Neill cylinders, a theoretical space colony model proposed by physicist Gerard K. O'Neill in 1976.[37]

Sound design and music

Gregg Landaker and Gary Rizzo were the film's sound engineers tasked with audio mixing, while sound editor Richard King supervised the process.[38] Christopher Nolan said he sought to mix the film's sound to take maximum advantage of current sound equipment in theaters.[39] Nolan paid close attention to designing the sound mix, for instance focusing on what buttons being pressed with astronaut-suit gloves would sound like.[9] The studio's website said that "The sound on Interstellar has been specially mixed to maximize the power of the low-end frequencies in the main channels as well as in the subwoofer channel."[40] Nolan deliberately intended some dialogue to seem drowned out by ambient noise or music, causing some theaters to post notices emphasizing that this effect was intentional and not a fault in their equipment.[41]

Composer Hans Zimmer, who scored Nolan's Batman film trilogy and Inception (2010), also scored Interstellar. Zimmer said that Nolan did not provide him with a script or any plot details for writing the film's music, but instead gave the composer "one page of text" that "had more to do with [Zimmer's] story than the plot of the movie."[42] It was through this connection that Zimmer created the early stages of the Interstellar soundtrack. Through a more in-depth analysis of the story's plot, Zimmer and Christopher Nolan chose the voice of Interstellar: a 1926 four-manual Harrison & Harrison organ.[42] Zimmer conducted 45 scoring sessions for Interstellar, which was three times more than for Inception. The soundtrack was released on November 18, 2014.[9]

Visual effects

The visual effects company Double Negative, which developed effects for Inception, was brought back for Interstellar.[43] Visual effects supervisor Paul Franklin said the number of effects in the film was not much greater than in Nolan's The Dark Knight Rises (2012) or Inception, but that for Interstellar they created the effects first, so that digital projectors could be used to display them behind the actors, rather than having the actors perform in front of green screens.[3] Ultimately the film contained 850 visual effect shots at a resolution of 5600 × 4000 lines: 150 shots that were created in camera using digital projectors, and another 700 were created in post-production. Of those, 620 were presented in IMAX, while the rest were anamorphic.[44]

The Ranger, Endurance, and Lander spacecraft were created using miniature effects by Nathan Crowley in collaboration with effects company New Deal Studios, as opposed to using computer generated imagery, as Nolan felt they offered the best way to give the ships a tangible presence in space. Created through a combination of 3D printing and hand sculpting, the scale models earned the nickname "maxatures" by the crew due to their immense size; the 1/15th scale miniature of the Endurance module spanned over 7.6 m (25 ft), while a pyrotechnic model of part of the craft was built at 1/5th scale. The Ranger and Lander miniatures spanned 14 m (46 ft) and over 15 m (49 ft), respectively. The miniatures were large enough for Hoyte van Hoytema to mount IMAX cameras directly onto the spacecraft, thus mimicking the look of NASA IMAX documentaries. The models were then attached to a six-axis gimbal on a motion control system that allowed an operator to manipulate their movements, which were filmed against background plates of space using VistaVision cameras on a smaller motion control rig.[45] New Deal Studio's miniatures were used in 150 special effects shots.[44]

Influences

Director Christopher Nolan said influences on Interstellar included the "key touchstones" of science fiction cinema: Metropolis (1927), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and Blade Runner (1982).[46] About 2001, Nolan said: "The movies you grow up with, the culture you absorb through the decades, become part of your expectations while watching a film. So you can't make any film in a vacuum. We're making a science-fiction film… You can't pretend 2001 doesn't exist when you're making Interstellar." He also said that Star Wars (1977) and Alien (1979) influenced Interstellar's production design: "Those always stuck in my head as being how you need to approach science-fiction. It has to feel used—as used and as real as the world we live in."[47] Andrei Tarkovsky's The Mirror (1975) influenced "elemental things in the story to do with wind and dust and water."[48]

Nolan compared Interstellar to The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) as a film about human nature.[49] He also sought to emulate films like Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975) and Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). He stated: "When you say you're making a family film, it has all these pejorative connotations that it'll be somehow soft. But when I was a kid, these were family films in the best sense, and they were as edgy and incisive and challenging as anything else on the blockbuster spectrum. I wanted to bring that back in some way." He also cited the space drama The Right Stuff (1983) as an example to follow and screened it for the crew before production.[3] To emulate that film, he sought to capture reflections on the Interstellar astronauts' visors. For further inspiration, grounded in real-world space travel, the director also invited former astronaut Marsha Ivins to the set.[10] Nolan and his crew studied the IMAX NASA documentaries of filmmaker Toni Myers for visual reference of spacefaring missions, and sought to emulate the look of their use of IMAX cameras in the enclosed spaces of a spacecraft interior.[50] Clark Kent's upbringing in Man of Steel (2013) was the inspiration for the farm setting in the Midwest.[19] Apart of films, Nolan drew inspiration from the architecture of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.[10]

Scientific accuracy

Kip Thorne, a theoretical physicist, served as scientific consultant and executive producer.

Regarding the concepts of wormholes and black holes, Kip Thorne stated that he "worked on the equations that would enable tracing of light rays as they traveled through a wormhole or around a black hole—so what you see is based on Einstein's general relativity equations."[51] Early in the process, Thorne laid down two guidelines: "First, that nothing would violate established physical laws. Second, that all the wild speculations … would spring from science and not from the fertile mind of a screenwriter." Nolan accepted these terms as long as they did not get in the way of making the film.[7] At one point, Thorne spent two weeks trying to talk Nolan out of an idea about a character traveling faster than light before Nolan finally gave up.[52] According to Thorne, the element which has the highest degree of artistic freedom is the clouds of ice on one of the planets they visit, which are structures that probably go beyond the material strength that ice would be able to support.[7]

Astrobiologist David Grinspoon criticized the dire "blight" situation on Earth portrayed in the early scenes, pointing out that even with a voracious blight it would have taken millions of years to reduce the atmosphere's oxygen content. He also notes that gravity should have pulled down the ice clouds.[53] Neil deGrasse Tyson, an Astrophysicist, explored the science behind the ending of Interstellar, concluding that it is theoretically possible to interact with the past, and that "we don't really know what's in a black hole, so take it and run with it."[54] Theoretical physicist Michio Kaku praised the film for its scientific accuracy and has said Interstellar "could set the gold standard for science fiction movies for years to come." Similarly, Timothy Reyes, a former NASA software engineer, said "Thorne's and Nolan's accounting of black holes and wormholes and the use of gravity is excellent."[55]

Wormholes and black holes

To create the wormhole and a supermassive rotating black hole (which possesses an ergosphere, as opposed to a non-rotating black hole), Thorne collaborated with visual effects supervisor Paul Franklin and a team of 30 people at Double Negative. Thorne provided pages of deeply sourced theoretical equations to the engineers, who then wrote new CGI rendering software based on these equations to create accurate computer simulations of the gravitational lensing caused by these phenomena. Some individual frames took up to 100 hours to render, totaling 800 terabytes of data.[4] The resulting visual effect provided Thorne with new insight into the effects of gravitational lensing and accretion disks surrounding black holes, resulting in the publication of three scientific papers.[56][57][58]

Christopher Nolan was initially concerned that a scientifically accurate depiction of a black hole would not be visually comprehensible to an audience, and would require the effects team to unrealistically alter its appearance. The visual representation of the black hole in the film does not account for the Doppler effect which, when added by the visual effects team, resulted in an asymmetrically lit black and blue-black hole. Nolan did not like the asymmetry caused by the Doppler effect and thought the audience would not understand why it was asymmetrical, so the finished black hole ignored it.[59] Nolan found the finished effect to be understandable, as long as he maintained consistent camera perspectives: "What we found was as long as we didn't change the point of view too much, the camera position, we could get something very understandable".[60]

According to Space.com, the portrayal of what a wormhole would look like is considered scientifically correct. Rather than a two-dimensional hole in space, it is depicted as a sphere, showing a distorted view of the target galaxy.[61] Thorne described the accretion disk of the black hole as "anemic and at low temperature—about the temperature of the surface of the sun," allowing it to emit appreciable light, but not enough gamma radiation and X-rays to threaten nearby astronauts and planets.[62] Futura-Sciences praised the correct depiction of the Penrose process.[63]

Marketing

The teaser trailer for Interstellar debuted December 13, 2013, and featured clips related to space exploration, accompanied by a voiceover by Matthew McConaughey's character of Coop.[64] The theatrical trailer debuted May 5, 2014, at the Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater in Washington, D.C. and was made available online later that month. For the week ending May 19 it was the most-viewed film trailer, with over 19.5 million views on YouTube.[65]

Christopher Nolan and McConaughey made their first appearances at San Diego Comic-Con in July 2014 to promote Interstellar. That same month, Paramount Pictures launched a complex interactive Interstellar website. It reported that online users uncovered a star chart related to the Apollo 11 moon landing.[66]

In October 2014, Paramount partnered with Google to promote Interstellar across multiple platforms.[67] The film's website was relaunched as a digital hub hosted on a Google domain,[68] which collected feedback from film audiences, and linked to a mobile app.[68] It featured a game in which players could build solar system models and use a flight simulator for space travel.[69] The Paramount-Google partnership also included a virtual time capsule compiled with user-generated content which was available in 2015.[70] The initiative Google for Education used the film as a basis for promoting lesson plans for math and science for use in schools.[67][71]

Paramount provided a virtual reality walkthrough of the Endurance spacecraft using Oculus Rift technology. It hosted the walkthrough sequentially in New York City, Houston, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., from October 6 through November 19, 2014.[72][73] The publisher Running Press released Interstellar: Beyond Time and Space, a book by Mark Cotta Vaz about the making of the film, on November 11, 2014.[74] On November 7, 2014, W. W. Norton & Company released The Science of Interstellar, a book by Thorne.[75] On November 11, 2014, Titan Books released the official novelization, written by Greg Keyes,[76] and on November 18, 2014, Wired magazine released a tie-in online comic, Absolute Zero, written by Christopher Nolan and drawn by Sean Gordon Murphy. The comic is a prequel to the film, with Mann as the protagonist.[77]

Release

Theatrical run

Before Interstellar's public release, Paramount CEO Brad Grey hosted a private screening on October 19, 2014, at an IMAX theater in Lincoln Square, Manhattan.[78] Paramount then showed Interstellar to some of the industry's filmmakers and actors in a first-look screening at the California Science Center on October 22, 2014.[79] On the following day, the film was screened at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles, California for over 900 members of the Screen Actors Guild. Actors McConaughey, Chastain, and Hathaway appeared afterward for a Q&A session.[80] The film officially premiered on October 26, 2014 at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles.[81] It premiered in Europe on October 29, 2014, at the Odeon Leicester Square in London.[82]

Interstellar was released early on November 4 in various 70 mm IMAX film, 70 mm film and 35 mm film theaters, and had a limited release in North America (United States and Canada) on November 5, 2014, and a wide release on November 7, 2014.[83] The film was released in Belgium, France, and Switzerland on November 5, 2014, the United Kingdom on November 7, 2014, and in additional territories in the following days.[84] For the limited North American release, Interstellar was projected from 70 mm and 35 mm film in 249 theaters that still supported those formats, including at least forty-one 70 mm IMAX theaters. A 70 mm IMAX projector was installed at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles to display the format. The film's wide release expanded to theaters that showed it digitally.[85] Paramount Pictures distributed the film in North America, and Warner Bros. distributed it in the remaining territories.[26] The film was released in over 770 IMAX screens worldwide, which was the largest global release in IMAX cinemas,[86][87] until surpassed by Universal Pictures' Furious 7 (2015) with 810 IMAX theaters.[88]

Interstellar was an exception to Paramount Pictures' goal to stop releasing films on film stock and to distribute them only in digital format.[89] According to Pamela McClintock of The Hollywood Reporter, the initiative to project Interstellar from film would help preserve an endangered format,[85] an initiative supported by Christopher Nolan, J. J. Abrams, Quentin Tarantino, Judd Apatow, Paul Thomas Anderson, and other filmmakers.[90] McClintock reported that theater owners saw the initiative as "backward," as nearly all theaters in the US had been converted to digital projection.[91]

Home media

Interstellar was released on home video on March 31, 2015, in both the United Kingdom and United States.[92][93] It topped the home video sales chart in its opening week[94] and for a total of two weeks.[95] It was reported that Interstellar was the most pirated film of 2015, with an estimated 46.7 million downloads on BitTorrent.[96]

Reception

Box office

Interstellar grossed $188 million in the US and Canada, and $487.1 million in other countries, for a worldwide total of $675.1 million against a production budget of $165 million.[2] After calculating all expenses, Deadline.com estimated the film made a profit of $47.2 million.[97]

The film set an IMAX opening record worldwide with $20.5 million from 574 IMAX theaters, surpassing the $17.1 million record held by The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013), and is also the best opening for an IMAX 2D, non-sequel, and November IMAX release.[98] It had a worldwide opening of $132.6 million, which was the tenth-largest opening of 2014,[99] and it became the tenth-highest-grossing film of 2014.[100] Interstellar is the fourth film to gross over $100 million worldwide from IMAX ticket sales. It trails Avatar (2009), The Dark Knight Rises, and Gravity (2013) in total IMAX box office revenue.[101][102][103]

Interstellar was released in the UK, Ireland and Malta on November 6, 2014, and debuted at number one earning £5.37 million ($8.6 million) in its opening weekend, which was lower than the openings of The Dark Knight Rises (£14.36 million), Gravity (£6.24 million), and Inception (£5.91 million).[104] The film was released in 35 markets on the same day, including major markets like Germany, Russia, Australia, and Brazil earning $8.7 million in total.[105] Through Sunday, it earned an opening weekend total of $82.9 million from 11.1 million admissions from over 14,800 screens in 62 markets.[106] It earned $7.3 million from 206 IMAX screens, at an average of 35,400 viewers per theater.[107] It went to number one in South Korea ($14.4 million),[108] Russia ($8.9 million), and France ($5.3 million). Other strong openings occurred in Germany ($4.6 million), India ($4.3 million), Italy ($3.7 million), Australia ($3.7 million), Spain ($2.7 million), Mexico ($3.1 million), and Brazil ($1.9 million).[109] Interstellar was released in China on November 12 and earned $5.4 million on its opening day on Wednesday, which is Nolan's biggest opening in China after surpassing the $4.61 million opening record of The Dark Knight Rises.[110][111] It went on to earn $41.7 million in its opening weekend, accounting for 55% of the market share.[112][113] It is Nolan's biggest opening in China, Warner Bros' biggest 2D opening,[114] and the studio's third-biggest opening of all time, behind 2014's The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies ($49.5 million)[115] and 2013's Pacific Rim ($45.2 million).[116][117]

It topped the box office outside North America for two consecutive weekends before being overtaken by The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 (2014) in its third weekend.[114] Just 31 days after its release, the film became the 13th-most successful film and 3rd most successful foreign film in South Korea with 9.1 million admissions trailing only Avatar (13.3 million admissions), and 2013's Frozen (10.3 million admissions).[118] The film closed down its theatrical run in China on December 12, 2014, (31 days after its initial release) with total revenue of $122.6 million.[119][120] In total earnings, its largest markets outside North America and China were South Korea ($73.4 million), the UK, Ireland and Malta ($31.3 million), and Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) ($19 million).[121]

Interstellar and Big Hero 6 opened the same weekend (November 7–9, 2014) in the US and Canada. Both were forecast to earn between $55 million and $60 million. TheWrap said the pairing was "potentially a close race." Scott Mendelson of Forbes called the race between the two films a "tight one" and compared it to competitions between 2004's Shrek 2 and The Day After Tomorrow, as well as 2013's Monsters University and World War Z.[122]

In North America, the film is the seventh-highest-grossing film to not hit No. 1, with a top rank of No. 2 on its opening weekend.[123] Interstellar had an early limited release in the US and Canada in selected theaters on November 4, 2014, at 8:00 pm, coinciding with the 2014 US midterm elections.[124] It topped the box office the following day on Wednesday, earning $1.35 million (which includes its gross from Tuesday night) from 249 theaters (42 of which were IMAX screens); IMAX accounted for 62% of its total gross.[125] Two hundred and forty of those theaters played in 35mm, 70mm, and IMAX 70mm film formats.[126] It earned $3.6 million from Thursday late-night shows for a previews total of $4.9 million (Tuesday–Thursday).[127][128][129] The film was widely released on November 7 and topped the box office on its opening day, earning $17 million (which includes the Thursday preview haul but not the Tuesday–Wednesday gross which would make up to $19.15 million) ahead of Big Hero 6 ($15.8 million).[130]

On its opening weekend, the film earned $47.5 million[nb 1] from 3,561 theaters, debuting in second place after a neck-and-neck competition with Disney's Big Hero 6 ($56.2 million).[132] IMAX comprised $13.2 million (28%) of its opening weekend gross,[132] while other premium large-format screens comprised $5.3 million (10.5%) of the gross. It is Nolan's first film to not debut at No. 1 since 2002, when Insomnia (2002) debuted at No. 2.[133][134] Commenting on the competition between the two films, and their subsequent results, Phil Contrino, vice president and chief analyst at BoxOffice.com, said, "It's good for the marketplace." He added, "The programming this weekend was very intelligent, and we didn't have a lot of that this year. Neither movie hurt the other one. They were both operating in separate camps and they both found an audience."[135] In its second weekend, the film fell to No. 3 behind old rival Big Hero 6 and newcomer Dumb and Dumber To (2014), and dropped 39% earning $29.1 million for a two-weekend total of $97.8 million.[136][137] It earned $7.4 million from IMAX theaters from 368 screens in its second weekend.[138][139] In its third week, the film earned $15.1 million and remained at No. 3, below newcomer The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 and Big Hero 6.[140]

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 71% based on 325 reviews, with a rating average of 7/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Interstellar represents more of the thrilling, thought-provoking, and visually resplendent filmmaking moviegoers have come to expect from writer-director Christopher Nolan, even if its intellectual reach somewhat exceeds its grasp."[141] On Metacritic, another review aggregator, the film has a score of 74 out of 100 based on 46 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews."[142]

Scott Foundas, chief film critic at Variety, said that Interstellar is "as visually and conceptually audacious as anything Nolan has yet done" and considered the film "more personal" than Nolan's previous films.[143] Claudia Puig of USA Today praised the visual spectacle and powerful themes, while criticizing the "dull" dialogue and "tedious patches inside the space vessel."[144] David Stratton of At the Movies rated the film four-and-a-half stars out of five, praising its ambition, effects, and 70mm IMAX presentation, though criticizing the sound for "being so loud" as to make some of the dialogue "inaudible." Conversely, co-host Margaret Pomeranz rated the film three out of five, as she felt the human drama got lost among the film's scientific concepts.[145] Henry Barnes of The Guardian scored the film three out of five stars, calling it "a glorious spectacle, but a slight drama, with few characters and too-rare flashes of humour."[146]

Oliver Gettell of the Los Angeles Times reported that "Film critics largely agree that Interstellar is an entertaining, emotional, and thought-provoking sci-fi saga, even if it can also be clunky and sentimental at times."[147] James Dyer of Empire awarded the film a full five stars, describing it as "Brainy, barmy, and beautiful to behold … a mind-bending opera of space and time with a soul wrapped up in all the science."[148] Dave Calhoun of Time Out London also granted the film a maximum score of five stars, stating that it is "a bold, beautiful cosmic adventure story with a touch of the surreal and the dreamlike."[149] New York Post critic Lou Lumenick deemed Interstellar "a soulful, must-see masterpiece, one of the most exhilarating film experiences so far this century."[150] Richard Roeper of Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film a full four stars and wrote, "This is one of the most beautiful films I have ever seen—in terms of its visuals, and its overriding message about the powerful forces of the one thing we all know but can't measure in scientific terms. Love."[151]

Describing Nolan as a "merchant of awe," Tim Robey of The Telegraph thought that Interstellar was "agonisingly" close to a masterpiece, highlighting the conceptual boldness and the "deep-digging intelligence" of the film.[152] Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "This grandly conceived and executed epic tries to give equal weight to intimate human emotions and speculation about the cosmos, with mixed results, but is never less than engrossing, and sometimes more than that."[153] In his review for the Associated Press, Jake Coyle praised the film for its "big-screen grandeur," while finding some of the dialogue "clunky." He described it further as "an absurd endeavor" and "one of the most sublime movies of the decade."[154] Scott Mendelson of Forbes listed Interstellar as one of the most disappointing films of 2014, stating that the film "has a lack of flow, loss of momentum following the climax, clumsy sound mixing," and "thin characters" despite seeing the film twice in order to "give it a second chance." He wrote that Interstellar "ends up as a stripped-down and somewhat muted variation on any number of 'go into space to save the world' movies."[155] Matt Zoller Seitz of RogerEbert.com gave the film three-and-a-half out of four stars, saying that despite his usual quibbles regarding Nolan's excessive dialogue and its lack of a sense of composition, "[Interstellar] is still an impressive, at times astonishing movie that overwhelmed me to the point where my usual objections to Nolan's work melted away … At times, the movie's one-stop-shopping storytelling evokes the tough-tender spirit of a John Ford picture, … a movie that would rather try to be eight or nine things than just one."[156]

The New York Times columnist David Brooks concludes that Interstellar explores the relationships among "science and faith and science and the humanities" and "illustrates the real symbiosis between these realms."[157] Wai Chee Dimock, in the Los Angeles Review of Books, wrote that Nolan's films are "rotatable at 90, 180, and 360 degrees," and that "although there is considerable magical thinking here, making it almost an anti-sci-fi film, holding out hope that the end of the planet is not the end of everything, it reverses itself, however, when that magic falls short, when the poetic license is naked and plain for all to see. In those moments, it suddenly dawns upon us that the ocean that rises up 90 degrees and comes at us like a wall is not just a special effect on some faraway planet, but a scenario all too close to home."[158] Author George R. R. Martin called Interstellar "the most ambitious and challenging science fiction film since Kubrick's 2001."[159]

Accolades

Interstellar won the Best Visual Effects award at the 87th Academy Awards, with nominations for Best Original Score, Best Production Design, Best Sound Editing, and Best Sound Mixing.[160]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The opening-weekend gross does not include the revenue it earned from Tuesday- and Wednesday-night previews. In total the film earned $2.2 million from the two late-night showings which would bring its opening-weekend gross to $49.7 million.[131]

References

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Further reading