Interstellar - Christopher Nolan - Cornfield Drone Chase Scene [1080P HD]
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- čas přidán 17. 03. 2015
- "What about the flat tire?"
This is a scene from 2014 Sci-Fi film directed by Christopher Nolan where Cooper, and his children, Tom and Murph sets out on a chase after an indian surveillance drone.
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Hans Zimmer is the secret sauce to any movie.
Although I agree with you, this movie's script and factually correct science made it all the more mindblowing. A shitty soundtrack would have sucked indeed, but the movie by itself was amazing. I'm sure I still would have very much enjoyed it.
Nope...that title goes to John Williams.
@@frenchify7506 Of course. What Aerin said is that Hans Zimmer is the 'sauce' - you still need to prepare and cook the ingredients by yourself :D
But lion king remake tho
Well said...
I never realized what a good introduction to the characters this scene is. It establishes the close teaching relationship between murph and her father. It establishes the son as a practical level-headed guy. It establishes Cooper the father as someone who will do something that seems stupid to capitalize on a very unusual circumstance. In some sense this scene is an echo to the later scene where he manages to dock to the spinning spaceship. And also that the son would drive off a cliff if asked to, just as he would continue farming until the end of the earth.
That’s a very impressive analysis 😮
Incredible analysis ❤️❤️❤️
Wow bro you need to chill a bit😲
Wow....
Love the film for reasons like this
Play the cornfield chase soundtrack at my funeral and I will wake up.
Now go code for TCS and Infosys
@@shrisub881 ?
If I play the docking scene soundtrack you might wake up and kill the ISIS.
Put the music beside his ears and it'll wake up him up
Nobody wakes up from his ashes mate.
Its crazy to think that christopher nolan actually didnt want to settle for less than reality so he actually planted the corn months before filming and they couldnt mess up a lot of times on this scene otherwise they wouldnt have corn to drive on.
Damn
I heard that this corn field was the same one used for "Man of Steel" and he didn't want it to go for waste. So he used it again. He was the producer for Man Of Steel
Exactly why I love Nolan. He puts more effort in to realism than just using cgi
Still much cheaper, faster, and better looking than having to create CG corn.
Then they sell it too
I can't even control a car in a video game.
He lands a multi-million dollar airforce drone with a mouse pad.
that's funny!
Not an Airforce drone
INDIAN AIRFORCE
She lands it bruh lol
What do u mean its not multi million dollar ?
"The earth is running dangerously low on corn."
*drives through acres of corn*
Explorers will always follow there instincts and chase the dream...if that makes destroying joe blogs next bowl of cornflakes then so be it...fuck the corn
It's growing well in that area but it's not likely to be enough for the entire population.
orcacam07 lol
they need the fucking drone...This are the same jerrks that dont understand the movies and after are talking like cinema experts
He didn't even care about the flat tyre,what you think does he gonna care about the corn??
'A truck chasing a drone in a cornfield'- there's no way to make this scene a special one
Hans Zimmer- Hold my beer
I don't think people realize just how much detail and depth there is in this. This sets the entire scene, from this scene alone we learn the following: first that India became a global superpower, and then Eventually when the rest of the world ran out of resources the United States and India both collapsed, and then demonstrates that USA don't even have the resources to detect or shoot down a foreign drone over their land, showing the collapse of the United States, while simultaneously showing the extreme shortage of supplies like solar panels because he said they were able to power an entire farm and he ignored the flat tire and did everything we could to grab those panels. That implies that they are very scarce and that resources are slim and that things are hard to come by. It also establishes him as an engineer. we learned that the robots are artificially intelligent if not sentient, including the drone, when Murphy asked why they can't just let it go, it wasn't hurting anyone. And he said it needs to learn how to adapt, and was going to teach you how to drive a combine. Also implies that labor is hard to come by, robotics is hard to come by, and the reason for blowing a tire was for no other reason than just for them to not fix it and skip it, showing just how important those solar panels to emphasized
just how scarce necessary equipment is
@@pilotavery wow!!😃
That's some cool, deep research.
@@pilotavery I’d agree with most of that, except for India becoming a superpower. That’s not really relevant to the plot as India has already collapsed, along with just about every country in the world.
Additionally, that drone has two distinct visual aspects to note in its design. One, it’s a design that was already behind in technology by 2014 when Interstellar came out, and would have been even older when technological development stalled in the 2020’s or 30’s. Secondly, it features quite distinctly American design aesthetics and behavior. Compare the American MQ-1 and MQ-9 to the Indian Harop and Harpy drones. Odds are, it was simply purchased by India after America had something to replace their old drones with.
This does add to the backstory in a quite meaningful way though. It shows that the governments of many countries were beginning to share resources with each other, because they had given up trying to save the Earth and embraced its decay. Funding for almost all scientific and civilian projects were dropped as there was a futile last-ditch effort to be the last country standing. What little resources most countries had left became funneled into their militaries in preparation for humanity to go down fighting itself. However, that war never came, and the survivors were forced to carry on with nothing. The mentality of the world’s governments here is the same as the mantra Dr. Brand gives to Cooper; “Rage against the dying of the light.”
It also helps explain why the schools have already ruled out his son for college and lies like Apollo being fake are being reinforced in the education system. Their society simply can’t afford to have hardly any of their population even think about anything other than the bare basics of survival.
@@t65bx25 He did say "it's fantastic drone with fantastic cells... It's indian"
@@pilotavery I think it also fleshes out Cooper's character. He always wanted to do something with his talent and was sick of being stuck on a piece of land being forced to grow crops. When the drone showed up, it was an opportunity for Cooper to rekindle his old passion for engineering, and he chased after it as a result, completely ignoring his daughter's parent conference meeting. It shows us his passion, his dedication, and his love for the things that he does, and how his children understand said love. Murph asks little to no questions when her dad just all of a sudden started to chase a random black plane, and while Tom does ask his dad about the flat tire, he also seems to go along with Cooper's antics in the end, and he later states that he likes what his Dad does better than what he has to do in the farm when Cooper later tells him to look after said farm during the baseball game.
For Interstellar, Christopher planted 500 acres of corn just for the film because he did not want to CGI the farm in. After filming, he turned it around and sold the corn and made back profit for the budget.
the joke apart, i think there's chances that he actually might have done it lol
@@Hachiman-nf6zc he actually did that 😂
@@Hachiman-nf6zc He was the producer for the man of steel. you can see the same farm in that movie. he eventually used it for this film too.
@@WikiZeruel "no f**king way" is what i would have reacted but then it's Nolan so yeah, i saw this coming
@@rogierharms4016 of course he would
That awkward moment when you realize that Grandpa is Gen Z....
Well, the year is not specified anywhere in the whole movie.
@@ahamedjunaid01 Well most likely it was like the late 21st century when there were no armies and the robots were "old" you can find it on the internet
Awkward how?
@@ahamedjunaid01 they didn't specify an exact date but they gave a lot of ranges and timelines to narrow it down within like 5 or 10 years, based off of actual events in history.
Grandpa is either Gen X or Z, he says when he was scrolling up every last one of six billion people trying to have it all, that implies that it is either just before 2024 just after a, when the population started to collapse. So if he was a kid between 2010 and 2020, it means he was probably born somewhere around 2,000
Yes, he said everyday was Christmas, new techs.
That movie is so beautifully shot from beginning to end.
ken Gaulthier apart from anne hathaway
@@bd603 why you hating on her she was good
Had to make it 1000
It's a masterpiece.
Yaaa
Re- release this movie in theatre i will not be tired to watch millions of times.
@midori .G. they re released it in the uk during the summer due to covid, they had all old films in cinema. I went to see it about 3 times hahaha
Most cinemas are still using 1080p. F'that
Movie name please
@@a1shortsvideos800
I N T E R S T E L L A R
What would we have to do to make them release this masterpiece again in theatres?
This movie is timeless. Few people appreciated it and got bored watching but I will always comeback and watch it at least once a year.
It made a ton of money and won an Oscar, I don't think it was underappreciated.
It really sucked. I'll just rewatch 2001 instead of this crap.
It sucked so bad it hurts 🩹
Your mc connaghey just repeated his performance from the aids movie, little girl and ann hathaway were abysmal and the ending had more cheese on it than a pizza from a take away place i knew where you had to beg them to put only half amount of cheese on your pizza and it would still melt the box on the way home
@@titusmccarthy then go and rewatch that 50 yrs old bullshit
@@titusmccarthywho ask you?
The cinematography in this sequence is just perfect. And the music pushes it to another level. AMAZING.
I just dont like how the aspect ratio changes depending on the scene, but it probably has a logical reason why that im just to dumb to know.
Eric Douglas it was shot using.imax camera's
mosho sihole oh yeah, imax theaters do use a 16:9 aspect ratio
Eric Douglas I’m a little late but a lot of Nolan’s movies do that. I think Micheal Bay tried it but the way he did it sucks and it was very noticeable
It's actually TOO MUCH
Nolan + Zimmer = Legendary Masterpiece
Andrew Hong always
Andrew Hong inception, dark knight series, dunkirk, interstellar
Nolans + Zimmer = Interstellar aka masterpiece
Its a Wonderful Wonderful Movie Ever I swear It is
PaladinPower one doesn’t fit even tho it’s still amazing
This is foreshadowing of how cooper is as a character. He doesn’t care that the tire is flat, and his son warns about the same. The same situation occurs when Dr Mann causes the explosion, TARS informs him about the situation but Cooper doesn’t care all he is focused on the thing in front of him. Character Development at best.
I mean it's prolly not _development_ of the character, but keeping the spirit of chasing his goals and not truly giving up, ever. Blackhole was kind of a last ditch to save his family, and the extremity analogue of the flat tyre; at that point he doesn't just risk turning a car into an immobile wreck, but puts his life up for the very "maybe" dr. Brand (not Amelia; her father) gave him, once again, just to give himself the slim chance to see the singularity that's for some odd reason said to be needed for the equation, but finds... better?
Brilliant man spotted.
This is my favourite scene in the whole movie.
Something about it is just so, human.
The glee on Cooper's face as he chases after the drone just like a kid running after a kite shows how people find joy in the things they love.
And the music is AWESOME.
This is poetry.
Coming across lost technology from better times wandering around aimlessly in a dying world. Like seeing a living fossil. It's nostalgic about humanity.
There's something very poetic about the way the truck navigates through the cornfield and kicks up the dirt. So beautifully shot.
Dylan Hoang thats fucking Nolan cinema, the car hiting the cornfield and the camera movement is just amazing
Dylan Hoang What about the flat tire?
dun da dun dun da dun dun da dun dun da dun dun da dun dun da dun dananananana...
+johnnyboy562 What about the flat tire? It was right beside another tire that wasn't flat so driving on a flat tire wasn't an issue.
ascoop22 i was just quoting the movie for fun...
No one ever talks about how good actor the guy who plays Tom is.
The Fab Yt Timothée Chalamet, he was widely ignored on this but right now is a very likely frontrunner for Best Actor in next year's Oscars for Call Me By Your Name, so yeah, he is a really a great actor.
He’s a beautiful person
"My beautiful boy" now !
Lady bird too! His my favorite actor rn
@@AraBianchi i felt bad when got snubbed by the 2019 Academy
2:07 That's Sanskrit language in Devnagri Script. He operated a drone with that language. Wow, I'm impressed, attention to the detail is at the whole new level. Christopher Nolan is amazing.
It's literally ridiculous attention to detail. You'll miss 90% of the movie if you don't watch it multiple times lol
I am surprised by your observation. Wow
@@sanjitsiriguppi832 not the code but user interface
Infiriority complex,,,, always looking for approval from foreigners....
@@siddharth2315 wth? He is just praising Christopher Nolan's attention to detail bruh
Its Indian Air Force Drone 🇮🇳. Awesome scene Mr.Nolan and team. I get goose bumps whenever i watch this scene ..
No offense but It's actually an insult , the software is so inferior it could be hacked easily by a single long retired NASA scientist..
@@HeisenMannjyea we ont talk about that 😅
@@HeisenMannjfirst of here everything based on assumptions. btw drone still working from 10 years in odd conditions. btw interstellar movie budget was 165 million dollars on the other hand we sent chandrayan 3 moon mission in just 75 million dollars. i hope you get my point.
My comment was response to the OP , there is nothing to get goosebumps from , only lnferior software can be hacked and all the hardware is imported , only assembled domestically, there is nothing wrong with that , each country has it own pace but calling it goosebumps is ldiotic , why is it so many people from lndia overhype their country's successes , I mean for sake of god , when NASA put man on the man , there was probably 1/100th the hype Chandrayaan 3 has (even adjusting for the the lack of digital media back then) , ISRO scientists are great just like any other scientists and I congratulate them for thier recent success but average lndian is much more of "talk more , do less" than any other nationailty I've come across , I mean the fact the you bring up Chandrayaan 3 in response to my comment says it all (Different Issue but since its about space , you had to throw the recent success of lndia to shut me up) , If your media and common man keep hyping everything like this , rest of the world will laugh at you like they are now , I feel bad for your scientits . You should take lessons from China , talk less , do more , create as little hype as possible and most importantly stop looking for approval of Westerners (Heavy lnferiority Complex , Can't blame you , after being ruled by british for centuries , this has to be natural , I mean look at all the recent comments , simps from your country looking for approval , I'm 100% certain if this fictional drone belonged to any other country they wont be caring at all) and coming to budget yes , its done very efficiently but saying it is less than interstellar budget is again ldiotc ,it doesn take purchasing power parity (look it up) into account , wjen you do that , you'll realize its not the case. if people understood what they are talking about they wouldnt be saying the budget is cheap rather , the path the propulsion module took , which was really efgicient @@vinodchaudhari6126
@@HeisenMannj I mean 10 -15 years is a long time. A 10 year old iPhone could be cracked in seconds. In terms of technology 10 years is really long.
This scene really sets the inspirational tone of the film.
Absolutely
"Figure it out. I'm not always gonna be around to help you." Words my Dad would often use.
Arch Stanton same
My father used to say , find a way and execute, I really miss him
Take decisions is my dad's word!
"Mijo. Algún día no voy a estar con ustedes. Usted tiene que hacerlo." They're the same words my father told me, just in a different language.
totally same
One of the details I love about this scene is that they used a truck that was new when the movie was made, and made it look like it was 50 years old. It’s a subtle touch that speaks to Nolan’s great attention to detail.
большое внимание к деталям?!
дети космического инженера топчут ногами солнечные панели крыла, это деталь какой мысли нолана?
не выдумывай то чего нет.
@@unokarpa4405womp womp Russian
People LOVE the dark Knight, people obsess over Inception, but people ADORE Interstellar.
Nolan created an underappreciated, underrated masterpiece.
All 3 of the films above are in my top 5 personnel films, but interstellar is my no.1
Incredible
Check out memento
the first 30 minutes of Interstellar on earth are so nice to watch, nothing about the plague is said directly, we have to put the pieces together over the scenes to understand what happened with Earth. If this film lasted four hours would only be better
lasted forever*
Uh, they literally explain exactly what's happening through dumb expository dialogue. Did we watch the same film??
@goduskychris Chris Godusky a sequel wouldn't work with interstellar
Yeah I kinda started figuring out from when grandpa said last Okra ever.
@@jeffw8218 idk why people always take exposition as dumb. If the exposition is well done(which it is here cuz it’s effective and doesn’t feel forced) it’s good
3:28 I loove how Cooper looks up at his son against the sun
This movie is perfect in all scenes
Nicely done
Legendary son from Dune
honestly this is one of my favorite movie scenes ever, I'm not even sure why.
The music ..
Background score
The beauty of the landscape, the storytelling about why they are getting the drone and I'll get attacked if I don't say it, the music.
Nolan: "it's just scene of a truck in cornfield, nothing fancy"
Zimmer: 🔥🔥🎹🎹🎹 🔥🔥
Great casting for the Murphy and Tom, they really look like the kid versions of the adult actors.
So true. But I thought the kid Murph looked far more like the elderly one. Mackenzie Foy looks quite a bit like a young Ellen Burstyn
Peter Sorin Completely agree! They really held their own acting-wise against their adult counterparts, too.
Even their magnificent acting as brother and sister.. totally how I would talk to my siblings..
Child Murph looks more like Brand lmao..
I cannot believe that is Timothé Chalamet
How can one hate a Christopher Nolan film
People used with Avengers
Shmason eg dunkirk was really dull
Platinum Pineapple no it wasn't
Religious morons
Just saw memento...only Chris Nolan film I didn't like except for the twist at the end
One question still remains... What about the flat tyres,😂
It’s a dually. It can drive if a tire goes flat because there are four rear tires
"We’ve Always Defined Ourselves By The Ability To Overcome The Impossible."
The Oscars doesn't deserve this masterpiece of a movie. 7 year old gem.
When I saw this scene the first time, something really hit me. The fact that Murphy gave "feelings" to the drone. Back then, I would see machines as machines, and now... My vision has changed about it. Best movie!
Aznaelli yup^, and the fact they're chasing an 'indian drone' for parts let you wonder about what happened to the world
Yeaaah :D ! It was very beautiful.
+L'univers d'Azna~ yup, also the drone and the red-orange machines they use for the crops have AI, so they seem more like a living thing than just a bunch of parts thronw toghether.
hipster
@@superharryboy still isnt living tho
Am I the only one who fell in love with that Truck? At least while it existed.
ChernoSnipers nope.
+ChernoSnipers Of course not! RAM 3500 FTW! ;)
Kevin Metz Hell yeah, dude
love how they made the truck look like an old clunker. I bet they chose the ram because it has a very reliable cummins engine mated with a bullit proof manual trans.
Patrick V.D. Valk A lot of people in rural communities use trucks including Duallies. I live in SE Texas in a small town and I've seen Chevy pickups from the 70's and up. Also fords and Dodges, too. And old, old, buicks lmao.
Cooper : Tom, get the patch kit. You got to learn how to do it yourself.
*Indian Air force drone passes by*
Cooper : Hurry! Get in the car
Tom: what about the flat tyre?
Always gets me laughing 😂😂
tire*
typre*
@@1EAS1World
Two things in this clip I found really fascinating: One, the drone belongs to India. The underlying assumption is that India will be capable of cheaply producing large number of advanced drones in the future. So cheaply that countless of them will hover freely in international skies and a few that stray away will barely be missed. And two, the drone's software code momentarily appears on Cooper's laptop. It is in Devanagari! Really inspiring to think that these drones will run on software written in Devanagari.
Dude hacked some Hindi codes may be his a NRI
Typical Indian living in dream
Oh this is just fiction don't overhyped 😂
I'm also indian btw
You are incorrect.
That drone was actually controlled by artificial intelligence ..
Even India doesn't exist against that kind of environmental changes.
So that drones were controlled by unknown AI.
Murphy's frnd was also a robot.
@Akash Verma come up with a better reply
Not this typical Indian reply shit
Did Any one Notice that laptop screen with Sanskrit language? 2:07
"It's Indian air force drone" at 1:35
Good finding dude. Its hindi right?
It's hindi because they received informations by an Indian Air force drone
It's Sanskrit . Apparently both Hindi and Sanskrit have the same script ( Devanagiri ) .
Christopher nolan actually stressed that they use devnagiri and the reason india air force's name was used because we are the best in remote sensing....Nolan pays a great attention to details
its year 2070s probably every language can use to coding any bloodware
its funny how they talk about the drone like its an animal or something
nathan huxtable Its still a beautiful machine.
nathan huxtable When it's programmed to the point where it can think and make decisions on its own without any human interaction for nearly 10 years, how far from an animal is it really?
nathan huxtable it was foreshadowing the rest of the movie about how humans have to adapt to keep surviving
BullseyeBullsclaw Very far of what humans think an animal is.
I'd say as smart as an Orca.
This scene is so nostalgic to me, it reminds me of my own father. My dad having me take the wheel or gear as a kid, me not being very good at it but still the excitement was there. My dad grew up on a farm and our immediate family still works and lives on the farm, my dad is good with engineering type stuff. We built a small rocket as a project one summer. Ah. This film overwhelms me with emotion
Every time I watch it or listen to the own soundtrack it really reminds me the kindness and love of my parents. It really goes deep in emotional, I mean, it touched my heart every time.
I remember like 3 years ago i saw the cornfield chase clip on instagram without knowing the movie and i was so fascinated from the cinematic shots and the soundtrack that i literally watched the movie only because of this clip.
It was the best decision in my life.
something i love about this movie is how the characters are acting with eachother. its so realistic
This was the scene that made me fully tune into this movie -- 100% the music. Hans Zimmer is soooooooo smart.
This music is playing all the time in this movie 😅
Most underrated movie ever.
nope its not
I see you are a new nolan fan
Don’t worry you will get used to it
What the fuck. By no means is this movie underrated dude do you live under a rock? It's one of the most popular movies in the past years.
@@gray4908 lmaooo 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤡
As a huge fan of this movie, it is not underrated, it’s overrated
Christopher Nolan: Okay Hans, in this scene, their chasing a drone through a cornfield-
Hans Zimmer: *PLAY THE PIPE ORGANS!!!*
One theme I noticed is that in the beginning when they are eating breakfast before school, Murph mentions her ghost and her grandpa gets coop to talk to her and he tells her that if she wants to talk science she has to get to the “how and the Y, and present your conclusions” about her “ghost” (who turns out to be her dad ). Through out the movie Coop always asks “how and why” whenever it was an important moment, but there was a few times he went totally off of gut feeling and faith rather than facts. Adding to the theory brand mentioned about love being able to transcend time and space. I think this shows that we should learn to trust our gut, and if you love yourself or someone, you know you can always trust them to make the right choice when it comes time. To conclude this, at the end when she told him she knew he was coming back, he asked “how” of course and she said “because my dad promised me”. LOVE
This scene is so delicately crafted that it not only tells the fate of unnecessary scientific projects , and also introduces the two children’s different mindset and the relationship between the family.
I have never seen any movies submerge itself into the music....this truly is a masterpiece of its own class..should have gotten an Oscar for the best movie....
Gorgeous scene. The beautiful, dreamy Alberta scenery and sunshine combined with Hans Zimmer’s brilliant and emotionally charged score... just beautiful!!! I shed a tear! ❤️😍
"Whatever can happen, will happen". Multiverse.
later on coop is like: "we saved ourselves" as if it was humans on a different timeline who found their dimension and placed the wormholes there.
And when it happens it happens
🌚
Christopher Nolan is a true legend...he not only said its an Indian airforce drone..but if you pause video at 2:06... the codes are also in Sanskrit..
Indian airforce uses English. Even if it didnt use English it will use hindi. hahaha
@@udayypathania The motto of IAF is sanskrit.
@@techtorialguy1783 the motto of most Indian organizations is in sanskrit doesn't mean they speak or use sanskrit while talking or while working. No one uses sanskrit if you are indian you would know that.
@Bleeding RED no it doesn't happen. Sanskrit is not a spoken language. Moreover india has 22 scheduled languages hindi is not the official language nor is Sanskrit. Indian airforce is a national organization. No offense but get your facts straight and i meant on a lighter note. Dont get too excited to just comment anything. And i dont know where you get your news from.
@UCeDi5x4eow-3lNUVYUamGig yeah i am sure of what i say because i am from india and i live here so i know what i am talking about.
the music in this scene is a masterpiece
Btw if u wanna listen to it more, its name is Cornfield chase
This is definitely one of the greatest movies of all time.
I'm so glad Timothee Chalamet was in this.
I remember talking with friends bout how good this movie was, but seems like no one really noticed Timothee 's role in it but me. And I googled him and knew he's gonna be big. Then CMBYN came out I was like damn I was so right.
I’m just glad he was already in a movie composed by Hans Zimmer before Dune.
I like this scene more than the whole space part. It's so... poetic.
there is something magical about the scene, mind explaining why it is poetic?
I guess it's the same for me kinda, like thinking back to Cooper being still on Earth, happy together with his family while he's now been in space for decades, makes you nostalgic for what actually went on in the movie just an hour ago. Could watch a prequel to see what led up to the events. Sure it'd feel different cuz it wouldn't have much space in it, but it'd be nice. The space part is undeniably brilliant especially compared to most other movies, and it's still the highlight of the movie of course, so I guess you kinda are more fond of this part as you say for it's not so stressful (negative way to call exciting I guess tho), depressing and... bittersweet? as the movie in itself is. Kind of a rollercoaster. lol
The film among many things also shows how uniquely beautiful our planet is. And even if the world is kind of going bad right now, we don't need to leave Earth or die irl... just yet, so that's comforting, we should preserve it best we can. I don't fancy going through similar sh*t to wjat Cooper goes through, especially not a black hole, cuz irl it's probably lethal, but leaving your family and fast forwarding their life for yourself from time dilation is just as bad if even possible. Other planets may be wonderous too, but let's not abandon Earth for we must, but rather go explore when we finally can. Well, prolly not happening in our lifetime anyway.
15 mins into this movie, and we all knew this is masterpiece.
You know a movie is good when you watch it on a plane and still get blown away
2:07
Fun fact:It says "safal logni" instead of "safal login"(login successful) and what follows is a bunch of gibberish devnagri script characters and sanskrit words.I have a hard time believing that the IAF will code in Sanskrit :)
i love how it switches from 70mm format to imax format. EPICNESS
Ummm.. IMAX IS 70 mm.
With the bars it was shot in 35mm.
it was shot on anamorphic 35 wide format. when it goes full screen thats imax
I always repair these changes between scenes ... but can not see the pattern, why some scenes are done in one and some in another. Probably, some genius choice, because... Nolan
Nolan shoots "epic" scenes in IMAX. That's the only pattern
I have no idea why but as soon as the music starts playing, I cry. It’s just so perfect. This will forever be my favorite movie.
notice the programming language that shows up on cooper's screen. i guess it's sanskrit. absolutely amazing detail. sanskrit has been talked about as a better option as a programming language. kudos christopher nolan.
I remember seeing this scene and thinking the actor who played Tom was awful. He just sounded so wooden. What a difference three years can make. That kid is currently nominated for Best Actor right now for Call Me By Your Name. He totally changed my mind about him.
Best actor award for this movie definitely goes to *cough cough* the dust guy.
When I first watch this film and had no idea what it's going to be. This scene just makes me cry instantly. There's just something about it. Whether it's the music or the cinematography or the scale of it or something else or the combination of them.
2:06 - that's sanskrit language. One of the oldest and most precise language of the world. I studied it till 8th standard.
No Tamil is 💪
@@Man0fSteell both are
@@Man0fSteell he said one of the oldest language not the oldest language . chill bro .both are very old languages .
@@avirupmukherjee6829 tamil much older than sansskritt
@@Man0fSteell no one is doubting it. India is a land of languages and religions our ancestors have suffered so much to preserve them or else none would have survived . let's not quarrel amongst ourselves let's cherish and remember their sacrifices.
Something about this scene really shows how beautiful this sort of scenery can actually be. Like the majority of the midwest looks like this and it just has this very open, special feel at times
the music
0:21 when camera changes we can se murphy smiling
Nice observation man ..even I didn't notice even after watch it for 5 times
Possibly a funny dialogue scene edited
Indescribable how much I love this scene..
It's a masterpiece of art ,best in terms of cinematic expressions so far.
Its cute how murph really thought about the drone's feelings and asked cooper to let it go.
Holy crap that's Elio
Liesbeth L ikr 17 year-old Timothée man😙
when i watched the movie for the first i didn’t realize it right away but then i was like omg that timotheeeeeee
This is one of my all-time favourite scenes in any movie. Just so beautifully shot and the music is wordlessly beautiful
7 years later, I'm still loving it!
I remember watching this incredible Sci-fi drama movie 5 years ago at my local IMAX cinema, as soon as the music starts at this scene, it gave me chills and I was mind-blown that the music and the scene blended perfectly and this movie is so memorable to me because it's the first movie I watch in IMAX form!!! :)
This film is grossly underrated. Amazing that you can make a sci-fi film of such intensity without relying on crap-ass CGI to get you through it. Was 2014 not the best year in film or what?!
Underrated??? It made 500 million at the box office, received universal critical acclaim, and won an Oscar. It got the recognition it deserved.
@@Ugh-Fudge_Bwana
But it could've won more. Imagine how many other films there are that aren't even close to the level Interstellar is and yet they won more awards. Even Gravity, that movie is nothing compared to this.
@@Ugh-Fudge_Bwana lol. Interstellar wasn't as critically acclaimed as some of Nolan's other films. Some critics didn't even like Interstellar. And the Oscar's that it was nominated for were all technical ones. It wasn't nominated for Best Original Screenplay or Best Picture or something.
@@sirleo5103 that sucks!
For me, interstellar is Nolan's best work, period.
What about the flat tire?
Ik it’s been two years but it’s a dually. You can still drive if one goes flat. You can’t haul though.
@@zanernobrainer I know I was just quoting Tom
@@mohdaamerkhan8828 the reply of the king
2:06 you can see sanskrit on coopers laptop.
It is one of the best computing language.
Such a stunning scene. Hooked me right into the movie from this point onwards
One of the most awesome scene... i love it
+kins i love it to with the music
This scene just brings me back all the time I love it so much
'A truck chasing a drone in a cornfield'. there's no way to make this scene a special one.
Hans Zimmer: hold my beer
How on earth did this not win best score
2:06 Damn.....Was that interface in Sanskrit (ancient Indian language which is said to be the "mother of all languages")?🤔 Those words looked familiar!
This is really amazing..
That's Hindi if u see carefully
I honestly think this might be my favourite scene in any film ever.
van hoytema's cinematography is absolutely breathtaking. not only in this movie but also in Dunkirk and tenet.
I love this so much, reminds me of my farmland back home. Good old 2012 days when my cousins and I would go to farmland to help with the farming. It looked similar to this. When i watched this movie, it brought back those moments that were stuck in my hind brain. This music is really amazing, it adds cherry on top of the cake to those memories. Love you Hans Zimmer
This scene foreshadows a lot of things:
1. Cooper driving through an entire cornfield (the staple food source), to catch a drone whose batteries he can use for his farm, mirrors how he leaves behind his family, something very important, to find a habitable planet where all of humanity can find a place to live. For the greater good.
2. While Cooper Jr is left to the tire changing, Coop speaks to Murphy - this foreshadows the future arrangement that Murphy is working in the same field as her father's, while Coop Jr stuck to being a farmer, doing the main heavy-lifting.
3. The driving through a cornfield meant low visibility - risking hitting a random rock, a scarecrow, or even a bale of hay, or some tractor - but Coop still handing over the wheels to his teenaged son, just so that he may catch the drone - foreshadows the same recklessness and trust in his kids, that enabled him to go through a wormhole
4. The broken down harvestor they almost hit exiting the cornfield represents the first planet with only knee-high water, while the cliff they almost run off represents Dr Mann, who almost derailed their entire mission in his selfish fear to return home.
5. Finally, Cooper telling his son the drone was up there for almost ten years by itself - foreshadows how Cooper himself would spend several decades himself in a black hole based structure. Alone, all by himself (ok, with that sassy robotic kitkat)
his names tom not coop jr lol
You're really overthinking this one out, man
Chill out bro! Just get some popcorn and don't think so much.
Why so serious
What about Tom being stubborn enough to keep driving despite coming up to a cliff? Foreshadowing how he wanted to stay at home despite the damage it was doing to him and his family.
Why, why I cry even in moments like this in this movie....masterpiece
Sushant Singh Rajput .. May you find a place amongst the stars you deeply admired.
May the Horizons reciprocate your unconditional love...
May you decide to not do it in an alternate reality, & live to explore the universe you loved so much.
#SushantSinghRajput 💔
02:00 and 02:06 ...the coding is in sanskrit language
I'm from India and amazed by every detail just for a deci-seconds.
"Login succesful" written as "safal laangni" which clearly shows that how ancient sanskrit is!!
Very thankful to understand this so easily.❤
The scene and the music are awesome. Beautiful film.
It’s crazy how unimportant this scene is to the story but Nolan took the effort to make seem huge
it does represent a lot for the character. cooper is living a mundane live on a farm. the car struggles but he makes something out of this tiny oppurtunity. just like in life www.sofiahariz.com/blog/interstellar-cornfield-chase-life
@Ed A. True, this scene sets the nature of the characters (and how they adapted)
Wtf are u talking about. THIS STARTS EVERYTHING
Try indian philosophy you will get the answer
This also explains the entire context of the global economy etc.
it establishes India became a global superpower, and then that the United States collapsed so that India had the resources to spy on us while we couldn't do anything about it, and then India collapsed, it shows just how desperate they are to get those solar cells, he added in the flat tire for no other reason than ignoring it and driving off just to emphasize just how important those solar cells are, which is more evidence that they are very scarce and that global supply chains dissolved. They also explain that finding labor or robotics is also impossible now and the way that Murphy talks about the drone as if it was a person just makes us aware it has a sentient or artificially intelligent brain just like TARS. it establishes just how desperate they are to grab the panels and it's also establishes coopers skills as an engineer.
There was a lot of information that we were able to learn from this scene.
this is without the doubt one of the greatest scenes in a movie ever😼
Notice how Christopher Nolan’s genius shadows through his movie. I have made an observation and since I didn’t notice anyone else commenting about this, I will.
Watch the ending in Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” and notice how Hans Zimmer’s music creeps in to the scene and then listen carefully to the father-son conversation. OBSERVE how the detective gives some sort of explanation to his son about the mythical batman, something incomprehensible to the common mind - in this movie,interstellar, how the father explains mainly to the daughter. Listen to the son’s questions in batman “why is he running dad”=“why did it come so low?(interstellar)”, “he didn’t do anything wrong?!..”=“It wasn’t hurting anybody?!” Christopher Nolan provides a moment of epiphany- in interstellar, how everyone(human race) and everything(drone) must learn to adapt in order to survive the cruel world. In batman- how everything has its price to pay, even being a hero.
How does every single scene in this movie make me want to cry? It just hits every emotional button I have.
The master Roger Deakins loves this whole scene. It's pure genius.
I love this scene, thanks for the video. Life is lke running on a cornfield without seeing forward but chasing dream.
Best cinematography
Incrideble. The connection between them gives the film a dramatic and affective atmosphere. This scene makes this explicit. A great movie. I LOVE INTERSTELLAR, it's the movie of my life...
Such a proud moment when he says it's drone of indian air force.
I love air forces
I never realised until now, that timothee chalamet played Matthew's son in Interstellar. Weird..
Some of the most beautiful music made by human beings. Melancholic and moving.