I'm sure you'll love it.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_e_smile.gif)
Redirected the conversation.- ak - wrote:Except most everyone agree that entering black hole would be crushed into infinitely tiny point, which would be death.Error_3113 wrote:I agree. 2001, especially for its time, was awesome. Interstellar, however, ran into problems with the whole black hole thing. The thing with messing around with black holes is, well, they're black holes. Nearly everything is speculative about what goes on inside.
That's another criticism of the film when it asked us to ignore everything we scientifically know about black hole. I would have been fine with a wormhole since it literally takes you to far away location of universe. Or at least make the black hole give off very different readings than any other black holes, that would have set up a build up toward the oddity inside that black hole.
Good movies, a lot of potentials, fell short of them.
As I understood, the black hole in Interestellar was a rotating (Kerr) black hole. Those black holes don't have point singularities, their singularities are shaped like rings, and IIRC there are certain trajectories around the ring where you could actually end up in another region of the universe otherwise disconnected from the main one (but we believe that those trajectories are unstable and collapse once you try to send matter through them).- ak - wrote:Except most everyone agree that entering black hole would be crushed into infinitely tiny point, which would be death.
That's another criticism of the film when it asked us to ignore everything we scientifically know about black hole. I would have been fine with a wormhole since it literally takes you to far away location of universe. Or at least make the black hole give off very different readings than any other black holes, that would have set up a build up toward the oddity inside that black hole.
Good movies, a lot of potentials, fell short of them.
Huh. I can't remember if the movie mentioned Gargantua being a Kerr black hole or not. Even so, the movie still didn't explains enough about what make this black hole unique that allows for the third act to occur logically.Vortex wrote:As I understood, the black hole in Interestellar was a rotating (Kerr) black hole. Those black holes don't have point singularities, their singularities are shaped like rings, and IIRC there are certain trajectories around the ring where you could actually end up in another region of the universe otherwise disconnected from the main one (but we believe that those trajectories are unstable and collapse once you try to send matter through them).- ak - wrote:Except most everyone agree that entering black hole would be crushed into infinitely tiny point, which would be death.
That's another criticism of the film when it asked us to ignore everything we scientifically know about black hole. I would have been fine with a wormhole since it literally takes you to far away location of universe. Or at least make the black hole give off very different readings than any other black holes, that would have set up a build up toward the oddity inside that black hole.
Good movies, a lot of potentials, fell short of them.
The movie may be a masterpiece in a lot of areas, but I do agree that it can be such a drag in several scenes as well. That's why I prefer the sequel, 2010, over this one because I felt it actually have a good emotional story with great actings and themes.RoentgenDevice wrote:I own 2001 and the DVD player already ate it 4 times; never got further than to the scene where the protagonist (?) talks to his daughter via some screen. I can't get over the pretentiousness those long takes with or without overplayed classical background music spray. It deeply disgusts me. I had to bite my fist during the last try.
I tried to at least read some interpretations of 2001 to close the gap in education, but had to find out that pretty much every respectable online interpretation is written by some hardcore fan who makes a page-long, inaccessible essay of it.
So yeah, I'll either have to sit through it eventually or just skip it. I'm not sure, really.