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Things In Interstellar You Notice After Watching More Than Once
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If you're a fan of Christopher Nolan's 2014 sci-fi space epic Interstellar, you'll probably want to
watch it more than once to make sure that you get everything out of it. So let's transcend space
and time once again as we discover the details that are only clear after multiple viewings.
The convergence point for the entire decades-spanning story in Interstellar is
Murphy's childhood bedroom. There's a poltergeist chucking books off her bookshelf and toying
with the physics of gravity and magnetism. Ten-year-old Murphy, played by Mackenzie Foy,
doesn't appear to be afraid of the apparition. Instead, she's mostly curious. Luckily, she's
being raised by a father with a scientific mind who has no room for superstition. Cooper, played
by Matthew McConaughey, instructs his daughter to not just label it as a "ghost" because she doesn't
know what it is. Instead, he directs her to study it and come to a scientific conclusion. Her
instincts end up being accurate all along, and her first line of dialogue hints at the final outcome.
The opening moments of Interstellar feature a brief tumultuous moment from Cooper's days as
a pilot. His aircraft spins out of control and the Gs amp up before he suddenly snaps awake,
safely at home in his bed. Standing over him is his daughter, who looks at him and says:
"I thought you were the ghost."
Later, by the end of the film, we find out just how accurate this statement really is.
Christopher Nolan is fascinated with the intricacies of time, particularly the paradoxes
created by toying with timelines. Interstellar creates scenarios where time stretches and
squeezes based on its characters' galactic locations. They unknowingly trigger various events
that lead them to the NASA base where Cooper signs on to pilot a mission to save the world.
Coordinates to this base arrive courtesy of the "ghost" in Murphy's room. The directions
are given in binary form by altering gravity, so billowing dust settles strategically on the floor
to spell out a message. The ghost ends up being Cooper himself from inside the tesseract within
the massive black hole known as Gargantua. But where did this whole chain of events begin?
As we find out later, the instructions for how to find the NASA base were given
to Cooper by Cooper himself. However, in order to get inside the tesseract
and give himself these directions, he needed to have already received them,
thus creating a paradox for which there is no answer. The notion of an unanswerable question
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