INTERSTELLAR Breakdown | Ending Explained, Easter Eggs, Hidden Details & Things You Missed

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Published 2022-12-10
INTERSTELLAR Breakdown | Ending Explained, Easter Eggs, Hidden Details & Things You Missed. In the video, we breakdown Interstellar and talk about things you probably missed the first time around. Interstellar is one of Christopher Nolan's strongest movies and it's definitely a film that gets better and better the more that you watch it. Filled with easter eggs, hidden details, amazing foreshadowing and a lot of things you might have missed, I thought I'd take a trip through the film to discuss everything about it. Let's get into it!

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So Interstellar is one of Christopher Nolans most ambitious movies. This is pretty much his 2001 and the director has a number of references to that and other movies. Throughout this video we're gonna be breaking it all down and talking the hidden details in it, easter eggs and also the true meaning of the movie and it's ending.

Now you can tell from Christopher Nolan's movies that he's absolutely obsessed with time. It's laced throughout a lot of his work from more obvious examples like Tenet down to more subtle things like his non chronological storytelling. Memento made the director a name and this told the main story backwards so that we could be hit with lots of twists and reveals. Inception had time melding as we got deeper into a dream and both Batman Begins and The Prestige used Flashbacks throughout.

Dunkirk had different periods of time being shown to us and in Interstellar time is almost like a force fighting against the protagonists. At it's core Interstellar to me has always been about a father sacrificing the time he has with his children in order to do his work. I'm sure this is something a lot of people can relate to and it leads to one of the most devastating scenes in the film.

The theory of relativity is laced throughout with time being something that the characters experience as moving differently depending on where they are.

However the idea of time extends beyond that and the ship the Endurance is even shaped like the face of a clock. We can see that it has a circular design with compartments going around it. In total there are 12 of these subtly hinting to us about this idea.

I think the most devastating planet that they travel to is the water one where we learn that the speed they experience time could cost them years on earth.

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All Comments (21)
  • @mitch-lawless
    You know it's a legendary film when you can make a breakdown of it almost 9 years after its release and people are still thirsty for it.
  • @satelliterain
    One of the most significant aspects for me was the brilliant design of the robots that accompanied them in the film. They were so unique and the fact that they did not use the typical anthropomorphic design which permeates most science fiction was just wonderful to behold.
  • I remember thinking deeply about the implications of traveling to the planet to have 25 years pass in a span of minutes. You literally have to face the fact all at once that you missed 25 years of your children’s lives. I specifically remember the moment my wife and I walked out of the movie theater after seeing Interstellar and looking at each other and saying “Wow I don’t think a movie has ever affected me so profoundly as that one”.
  • the music playing with the docking scene is incredible. Zimmer did such a fine job with this movie. you really feel every single scene.
  • @patkundesu
    If this movie gets re-released on theaters, I will not ever miss the chance to rewatch it. Especially on IMAX.
  • @bt2598
    Nothing will be like the first time I watched the movie. It was so beautiful and emotional. Coop rewatched the tapes after they came back 23 years later was heavy. Finding out that he was the ghost and communicating with Murphy also had me in tears.
  • The body floating in the water on Miller’s planet must be Doyle. This is because Miller was part of the first mission which wore suits with orange outlines. The suit floating in the water does not, so it must be Doyle.
  • @fredp8495
    The Son always believed in his dad, he was the only one supplying video messages to him during his mission meanwhile Murph was living life. The saddest tearful moment was realizing they never saw each other again!😢
  • The fact that they made a new render of blackhole based on true mathematical calculations is testament to Nolan's hardwork!!!
  • This movie was on different level.......and combined with Hans Zimmer 's theme oh man makes this much more epic!!!
  • @MensaGiraffe
    What made this movie so emotional ,was that it made humanity seem so small in the grand scheme of the Universe and all of the unknowns yet to be discovered or never to be discovered. Realizing that all of our Earthly relationships and the love that we experience is extremely short lived as the Universe continues to exist and change. We are simply passengers on a ride that we have zero control over.
  • @saltadmin7829
    I've had people tell me so many times "of all people i know, i cannot believe YOU have not watched Interstellar yet, after all this time". I finally found 3 consecutive hours where I could dedicate to watching it, and they were right. Gosh that ending when he sees his daughter again got me so choked up. It was definitely more a movie about love than a space movie. And it pulled soooo hard on the parent strings.
  • @iAutodidact
    I'm late, but I think it's important that Brand states love transcends time and space, and she loved Edmunds and was drawn to his planet. The others resist that hypothesis and go to Mann's planet, which almost ends the entire mission. In the end, that transcendental love was actually the correct choice, and Edmunds's planet is chosen as the future for humanity.
  • @ryansproviero
    I've always found Dr. Mann's initial actions of lying about the planet to be redeemable if admitted immediately. It's the theft of the ship and the story leading up to it and his enthusiasm to make it believable that makes him a villain. Also his disabling of his AI robot shows premeditated intentions to do what he did.
  • Good breakdown. What always gets me about this movie is that Murphy’s law is all the way through it. If they hadn’t gone to Miller’s planet first and lost time, Murph would still be a child back on earth when they got back to Endurance. If Mann hadn’t faked his data bringing them to him and then partially destroyed the Endurance causing them to get away from Mann’s planet, they wouldn’t have been caught by Gargantua for Cooper to do his thing and Brand to get to Edmund’s planet. At the end after all those years, Cooper wouldn’t have lived if all that time hadn’t passed where humanity was on the station near Saturn, catching him before his O2 ran out. So Miller, Mann, years lost were all meant to happen for humanity to survive. Since a future humanity created the wormhole meant everything in the movie had to happen how it did, or there would be no wormhole. It’s likely the older Brand already knew this too, so I don’t think of his character badly. He knew they’d succeed, so built the station. Fun stuff you’ll notice in the movie: there are no birds on Earth. You don’t see them or hear any. On Cooper station, you do hear them, so it seems Brand/NASA kept some animals/birds alive or their DNA for the station(s). Slight errors in the movie: on Cooper station when the baseball goes through the window, one of the roofs (the flat roofed building on the right) has a Dish network satellite dish on it, and in the recreation of Cooper’s home also on Cooper station, you’ll see clouds and blue sky out the door and windows. Oops.
  • I really like this film. My biggest issue is the lack of logic from the astronauts (I guess they needed that for a good film). If they were able to calculate how long each minute down on the water world would equate to their own time, then they would also have been able to deduce that the scientist that was sent down there several years ago would have only had an hour or less to explore the planet, so there's no possible way that they could have known yet if it were habitable. Therefore, they should have known that there was no point in going down to that planet in the first place.
  • @ladygenesis
    Interstellar to me, has always been one of the best movies. I can't even put into words the many ways this movie has stunned me with their research, the acting, the visuals. I've never rewatched a movie as many times as I have rewatched this.
  • The body in the water in Miller's planet that we see is Doyle because the suits from the previous voyage had an orange neck piece all around, similar to Dr. Man's suit.
  • @kosminotaur6159
    This movie is my favourite movie of all time. Not only does it engage you in every scene, no matter the importance, but it’s also incredibly realistic and makes you feel as if it were real. This movie is amazing and truly emphasises the possibilities of man. It creates excitement and engagement which not many movies can do, and the fact it was made almost a decade ago is astonishing. Truly one of the best movies of all time