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Breath-taking Fare |
Interstellar is another masterpiece from master director,Christopher Nolan.
In this science-fiction movie, he explores complex ideas like like wormholes, relativity, time and the elusive five-dimensional thinking.
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A Fantastic Visual Experience |
It is both factually educational and thought-provoking.
The premise of the future Nolan world is overpopulated and in constant struggle to feed the masses. Though farming is the future, the crop blights seems to engender government investment in interstellar research to look for an alternative live-able world for humans.
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Transcending the worm-hole |
Continuing from partial information retrieved from earlier Lazarus missions, Matthew McConaughey's piloted the last Ranger into deep space after taking from a cue from his daughter's poltergeist premonitions. With the aid of two robots and 3 crew members, he transcended a wormhole just beyond Saturn, into a new galaxy.
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Hathaway as Dr. Brand |
The new world through the lens of Nolan is nothing short of breathtaking. The visions of the black holes, the worm-hole, ice-planets and water planets are simply beautiful.
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The Water Planet |
As for the actors, McConaughey's character is well-developed. Hathaway and Caines' characters's are fairly developed but Damons's role as Mann, the baddie, is mostly minuscule and forgettable.
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The Ice Planet |
Totally unforgettable will be Mackenzie Foy, who plays the young sensitive Murphy. For her part, Jessica Chastain provides the melodramatic thread of an adult Murphy that connects both father and daughter over time and space wherein springs the solution to the entire panning out of the
Interstellar story.
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McConaughey, Chastain and Hathaway |
Almost stretching to 2 hours 47 minutes, this movie may win some Oscars this February.
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The young Murphy |
Superb storytelling and enjoyment of a movie but for its length!
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