FWS Movie Review: INTERSTELLAR (2014)
Sunday, November 9, 2014

The Spoiler-Free Plot

The future is not pretty, and Terra is not a happy world. Humans and all life on Earth are suffering through an environmental collapse that has left human civilization in an emergency agrarian society mode, with governments and society at large, just hanging on. Added to this that the bulk of the food crops are failing all around them, and human life on Earth is about to go out. Hope arrives with an unknown wormhole forming near Saturn that could allow humanity to explore the cosmos to locate some vacant real estate in another galaxy. The only thing is that the US government axed NASA years ago due to budget issues. However, some rouge underground scientists have been constructing an space vehicle called Endurance to travel through the looking glass, the bulk of the film starts, the major plot points are revealed along with other weirdness. What will the crew and LEGO robots of Endurance see on the other side of the wormhole?
The GOOD
Without a doubt, Interstellar is a beautiful film with an impressive cast, realistic designs, wonderful (and impressive) actors, outlandishly great effects, and haunting music by Hans Zimmer. At those levels, Interstellar is firing on all cylinders. The film also touches on our place in the universe, what and who we really are at our core. It also discusses the perils of FTL travel and the connection that love forges, especially between parents and their children. The dying Earth is much different that shown in other recent films, and future Earth of Interstellar appears more similar to Dust Bowl Oklahoma than Mad Max.
To add that layer, Nolan mines the PBS documentary on the Dust Bowl (which I watched), and uses it with great effectiveness. When it comes time for the time to travel millions of lightyears away, the distance and the nature of deep space is surprising realistic that allows the audience to travel emotional and mental to those very distance points of light, The two alien world environments seen on-screen are very well designed allowing the audience an instant and real alien vista to look upon that seems alien and hostile. I wish there more. The ship, Interstellar, and the Ranger landers are also done with real-science and real beauty. This is also applied to the oddball robot designs that appear to be out of the video game Minecraft, however they work on-screen and are impressive in an odd way. However, the greatest moment of the film comes when the Endurance enters the wormhole. It is an moment that needs to be experienced on an IMAX with the speakers pumping. Truly, one of the great moments in science fiction cinema. All-in-all, Interstellar is one hell of an visual/auditory feast that has a creepy air to it.

The UGLY
It is the end. I am so tired of film that go rouge and gets mind-fuckery weird at the very end. The connection for Interstellar to 2001: A Space Odyssey becomes more apparent when the end 15 minutes unfolds, and the story and film suffers. There was a better film under the bullshit that the Nolan brothers laid over the basic story. The film should have about the journey and the race to find another world, not a "ghost" or the role of gravity in space/time. Interstellar is a little like Chinese food. You could pick around the ingredients you don't like, but the dish is incomplete without it, even if you hate celery. I liked the hunt-for-another-world storyline and the father-daughter-in-a-dust-bowl situation, but there is there other parts that I cannot discuss in an spoiler-free review, and they drag down a much better move into the deep dark water, and murder it.
The Bottom line on the film and Should You See Interstellar?
This film is getting wildly mixed reviews by professional critics and word-of-mouth, causing some to doubting a trip to the ole cinema. So, should you it? Yes. I think so. The power of the images coupled with elements of the story are worth the IMAX experience and your cash. However, at the end of this film experience while walking back to my Toyota, I came away with this: Interstellar is one part 2001: A Space Odyssey, another part, Field of Dreams, and another part Gravity, and it mostly doesn't work...it is like when your Hollandaise sauce breaks after you worked so hard to create it.
The Forever War/Interstellar Connection
While watching this space trek through the corn fields of the future, I could not help but wonder if we are seeing what The Forever War film might look like in Nolan's Interstellar. Both deal with aspects of the horror of FTL travel, how deep space alienates our space travelers from the bulk of humanity, and how this long strange trip alters human behavior. Honestly, some of the visuals should have saved for The Forever War movie...but, if this is what The Forever War movie will look like, we could be in for a real treat.