My comment may contain SPOILERS for Interstellar, fair warning.
Interstellar is my favourite too. I rewatched it recently, and as always I struggled to make it through without crying.
When I first watched it as a teenager I was astounded by the spectacle and visuals of Cooper's journey.
Now that I'm older, those things still excite me, but I'm more affected by the relationships in the film. The tension in the crew as they struggle to make the right choices. The betrayal by Dr Brand, when it is revealed that "Plan A" was never possible.
And of course, the relationship between Cooper and his daughter. I'm not a father yet, but I'm reaching an age when I'm thinking about it, and I think that's why this affects me so much. When Cooper departs from Earth, not knowing if he will see Murph again. The video messages he receives after visiting the water world, where he learns that he missed out on most of his children's lives. And of course their eventual reunion when Murph is an old lady in her deathbed.
What that man went through is unimaginably horrible.
Cooper’s hero’s journey is the reason the film is so good. If the journey had been easier, the movie would not have done as well. You would not want to watch it the second or fiftieth time. I have to say the music was really good too.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @alt 11h
Hans Zimmer always goes the extra mile with his scores. His music for Interstellar was particularly good though, I agree.
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