With Christopher Nolan's new movie to officially hit theaters in a few days, fans are getting more and more antsy about getting to watch what promises to be the most epic sci-fi movie of its time. After all, Christopher Nolan is responsible for some of the most magnificent movies to grace the movie screens in recent years -- The Prestige, Inception, and The Dark Knight trilogy. Not to mention, The Following, Insomnia, and Memento. His newest movie Interstellar has already been shown through private screenings and plenty of celebrities fortunate enough to be invited to one of these couldn't help but gush about the Interstellar movie plot.
So what are mere mortals like us to do while waiting for the November 7 screening of this movie? Well there are plenty of Interstellar trivia and Interstellar movie plot details floating around the Internet that we can distract ourselves with in the meantime. For one, did you know that director Christopher Nolan absolutely avoids the blue screen in shooting his films? He reportedly used rear projectors for the star splashed backgrounds of the movie. According to Entertainment Weekly, Christopher Nolan "loathes blue screen the way the Amish loathe zippers.
As with what cast member Jessica Chastain says, this movie -- though science fiction in look and feel -- it's better labeled a "love story." Everyone in the cast talks about the emotional heart of the Interstellar movie plot. And now, even Christopher Nolan's wife has confirmed this. Says Emma Thomas, "When Whenever I read that Chris' films are 'unemotional,' I don't agree," Emma Thomas says, "but I do find this one to be more emotional."
And it's true what those previous speculations have been saying -- Jessica Chastain plays a grown-up version of Matthew McConaughey's daughter According to Variety, "Thanks to the theory of relativity, she keeps getting older while he stays the same age."
Lastly, the theme of the movie, as stated by the director himself, comes from the main conflict in the Interstellar movie plot "What happens when scientists bump up against these things that defy categorization and analysis -- like love?"