• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Interstellar trailer

I saw the trailer before The Hobbit ... and it was just way too vague to capture any interest. It was only when I saw Nolan's name attached to it that I thought, "this has potential." If only because he's due for a rebound following the disappointment that was TDKR.
 
I can't have been the only person who was reminded of this, right?

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkZFWr0vR8Q[/yt]
 
Here's the description from wikipedia:
wikipedia said:
When a wormhole (which hypothetically connects widely-separated regions of spacetime) is newly discovered, a team of explorers and scientists embark on a voyage through it to transcend previous limitations on human space travel. The Hollywood Reporter said in addition to the official synopsis, "The plot is believed to involve time travel and alternate dimensions, but other details are being kept under wraps."


I heard McConaughey travels back in time and fixes a mistake in his life but creates a paradox instead.
 
At least it's not as confusing as the first trailer of inception. I was sitting in the theatre trying to wrap my brain around it but then i saw the movie and it was all good.

Being Nolan i have high hopes for another masterpiece and i'm at the stage where i see a movie from him no questions asked which is rare for me.
 
I just love the music. If that's a preview of what Zimmer's got in store for the rest of the movie then I can't wait.
 
Maybe I'm reading too much into it, but that whole thing felt totally American-centric. I know yanks have a hard time grasping that they're not the centre of all creation so it may not have been intentional, but from an outside perspective, those images mixed with those words have a certain jingoistic ring to them.

It's a movie with a trailer set in America, about an American, in a trailer for American audiences shown at American cinemas.

But the director is British?
 
I don't know what this movie is about.

That means that the trailer failed.

No, it's a teaser, they only have to make you aware it's out there. The full trailer will do the rest. Example: The ST09 teaser was awesome, but you knew nothing about the movie:

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--vmdNTPTHs[/yt]

RAMA
 
The first full trailer is slated to be attached with "Godzilla" this weekend and expected to be online this week as well.
 
Cool. I thought I remembered hearing something about it, but I wasn't sure.
 
Mixed feelings about the science. The bit about running out of food rather than electronics doesn't quite ring true; if we don't start mining the Moon and asteroids within the next couple of decades, we're going to run out of rare elements essential to modern electronics, including various rare-earth metals and helium. Yes, helium, which is vital for cooling in various high-tech manufacturing processes, which is becoming dangerous scarce, and which the US is totally squandering due to an outdated policy requiring it to sell off its entire helium reserve at a time when helium should be treated as something more precious than gold. Rare earths might be recoverable from landfills, from all the electronic junk we keep throwing away, but once the helium is gone from the planet, it's going to be very, very hard to get more, unless we go to space where it's abundant.

Also, "Nothing in our solar system can help us?" The resources waiting for us out in the asteroids and outer moons and so on are immensely more abundant than the resources we have here on Earth, and that includes water and organic compounds. Using the resources of the Solar System could make our species rich beyond what anyone today can comprehend.

But that wormhole made me very, very happy. Clearly this is where Kip Thorne's input came into play. Finally, we get to see a movie that portrays a wormhole properly, as a spherical warp in space (a 3D entry to a 4D passage) that you could see through to the other side, rather than some kind of funnel of swirly light.



(*DISCLAIMER: Joke about American jingoism only. I do not literally believe that Chinese are the same thing as Aliens.)

You might be interested to know that "alien" originally meant "foreigner," and technically still does -- as in the legal terms "enemy alien" or "illegal alien." Literally it just means "belonging to another." It didn't take on the science-fiction connotation of "extraterrestrial" until the early 20th century, and that was mainly in prose SF; the general public didn't begin using it that way until the 1960s or so. Before then, movies or cartoons or the like about extraterrestrials would instead use terms like "men from Mars" or "spacemen" or "creatures from another world."
 
Pretty much the only thing I can think of that would qualify for "nothing in the solar system can help us" is the sun going nova or maybe a black hole approaching.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top