Interstellar (2014)
Four and half Stars out of Five
Cooper: Matthew McConaughey
Brand: Anne Hathaway
Murph: Jessica Chastain
Director/Writer: Christopher Nolan
Writer: Jonathan Nolan
Cinematography Director:
Hoyte Van Hoytema
Music: Hans Zimmer
Christopher Nolan has consistently shown himself willing to
take on difficult-to-tell stories (the reverse time flow of Memento is a good example). As the
director and co-writer with his younger brother, Jonathan, Nolan has found with
Interstellar an incredibly
challenging story to tell. If one focuses on the science and time sequence
issues, the story might be as confusing as 2001:
A Space Odyssey. On the other hand, if one instead focuses on the
father/daughter tale, it is a wonderfully emotional story than anyone can
follow and appreciate.
The story is of a future Earth (with oddly contemporary
trucks and cars) where a “blight” is
systematically destroying the Earth’s food crops and converting the atmosphere
to an oxygen-free version of today’s air. We are introduced to Cooper played by
Matthew McConaughey and his immediate family, which includes a pre-adolescent
daughter, Murph (Mackenzie Foy). These early scenes are often oddly comic in
dialog but deeply sinister in foreshadowing. Borrowing sequences from Ken Burns’
documentary on the American dust-bowl, the viewer is shown that the Earth and
her inhabitants have no future in this second dust-bowl.
Through a largely unbelievable story line Cooper is engaged
by NASA to pilot a vessel to Saturn, enter a worm hole and venture out to three
prospective new worlds where Humankind might begin again. There are logical
inconsistencies in setting this stage, and the physics (despite being advised by
Cal Tech’s Kip Thorne) require on several occasions much from the viewer, but
then this is fiction, science fiction, and one must make allowances for this kind of tale.
The stage is a fantastic one, but like television’s The Walking Dead, the viewer is allowed
to take in situations and people on this stage that are completely
believable in this context and to take part in several scenes of overwhelming emotional
intensity. This has always been for me the hallmark, even the raison d’etre for
good speculative fiction, whether of a scientific or fantasy nature. That is
to say create a stage where the story-teller can give the audience a tale that
will involve them emotionally and inform them intellectually; and ideally tell
such emotions and ideas that simply cannot be told without that fantastic
stage.
The Nolan’s in Interstellar
have created a story that makes intimate and completely requisite use of time
dilation, of Einstein/Hawking attempts at a theory of everything (and of
course, they get one – hey, it’s Hollywood), and to involve the audience in the
effects of the former, and the necessity of the latter to save Mankind. Such a
fantastic stage this is. And yet, because of the time dilation effects of
immense gravity near a black hole, we are treated to a story of life-long love
between a father and a daughter that simply cannot be told in any other way.
The acting by McConaughey and Chastain as the adult Murph are
as in last year’s Texas Buyer’s Club
for McConaughey and 2012’s Zero Dark
Thirty for Chastain are easily Oscar-worthy performances. Indeed, this movie is
filled with superb acting: John Lithgow as Coop’s father-in-law, Michael Caine
as Brand’s father, Matt Damon and Anne Hathaway as fellow astronauts. But for
me the highlight scene involved McConaughey reacting to a message from home –
it was almost too painful to watch for its intensity.
Another great aspect of using the science fiction stage was
the incredible special effects depicting the worm hole and black hole (though I
must say, some of the space ship exterior scenes seemed oddly of a lower caliber). The
editing near the end of the movie and the music score by Hans Zimmer throughout
were of very high quality. The use in particular of an absence of sound for
various space scenes to help give a feel for space versus the soaring music for
other scenes of great emotional intensity were often spectacular.
I loved this movie and wanted so badly to give it five
stars, but alas the science and logical inconsistencies won’t let me. But I did
love this film and want everyone to see it. I’ll write elsewhere of the problematic
parts that keep occurring to me after walking out of the theater.
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