We've always defined ourselves by the ability to overcome the
impossible. And we count these moments. These moments when we dare to
aim higher, to break barriers, to reach for the stars, to make the
unknown known. We count these moments as our proudest achievements. But
we lost all that. Or perhaps we've just forgotten that we are still
pioneers. And we've barely begun. And that our greatest accomplishments
cannot be behind us, because our destiny lies above us.
I'm
just starting the first leg of my Florida vacation - I'm en route to
Toronto where I'll be joined by my friend Colin, aka Cloin of the
Campbell Brothers, and we'll fly down to Miami together before heading for Key West in the morning.
It's a big full plane, which would make
the Civilization Game quite playable, but I'm more intrigued to see that
Interstellar is on the list of options for in flight viewing.
I ended up just not getting to
Interstellar in commercial release, but it's been on my
list of catch-up movies. It generated a lot of geek buzz when it
debuted, with physics luminary Neil deGrasse Tyson publicly weighing in regarding
the accuracy - or lack thereof - of the wormhole and black hole science
involved in the plot.
Interstellar presents us with an Earth which is no longer on the edge of starvation but past it, with a reduced population living in a global dust bowl à la
The Grapes of Wrath. Widowed spaceship pilot manqué Cooper, played by Matthew McConaughey*, grows corn and drinks beer while mourning the loss of the pioneer spirit in favour of survival.
Enigmatic messages from an unknown force point Cooper and his daughter Murphy toward a hidden NASA base which is covertly planning a trip through a mysterious wormhole in hopes of finding a habitable planet. Cooper decides to abandon his family and pilot the mission, even though time dilation makes it impossible for him to tell his family when he will return. Elderly physicist Michael Caine promises to have solved the mysteries of gravity manipulation before Cooper's return so that mankind can emigrate to their new home in space - once Cooper finds it.
The other side of the wormhole is a sort of physics playground, with a black hole causing all sorts of peculiar problems for the explorers.
Even as an amateur physicist**, there were aspects of those problems that I found to be questionable. For example, at
one point the crew visits a planet which is orbiting a black hole
closely enough that time dilation has slowed time to a crawl: seven
years pass on Earth for every hour spent on the planet's surface. They
leave one crew member in orbit and take a lander for a hit and run visit to the planet in order to determine the fate of previous explorers. Of
course problems ensue, and when they make it back to the ship 23 years
have come and gone for the solitary crew member***, and Cooper's distant daughter is now the same age that he is.
But...if the ship is in orbit, it would have to be orbiting in line with the plane of the planet's orbit so that it wouldn't get any closer to the black hole at any time, or else it would suffer from fluctuating time dilation effects. Actually, why not get the ship into a position so that exactly the same amount of time passes on the ship as on the planet? Or less time?
Similar moments of fuzzy logic continue throughout
Interstellar, and the climax is a confusing mix of
2001: A Space Odyssey and arbitrary, illogical
deus ex machina intervention by future versions of humanity. A little advice to our distant descendants: if you need to twist time and manipulate space so that information crucial to the survival of humanity is transmitted, maybe do your twisting and manipulating so that the information goes to a scientist instead of a pre-teen girl's bedroom?
- Sid
* It used to be
that if you wanted to cast someone as an archetypal American, you picked
Kevin Costner. In the fullness of time, Mr. McConaughey has taken over the job.
** Reading science fiction is like getting a really strange education in the sciences. With aliens on the side.
*** Who is a little quiet for the rest of the movie, not a huge surprise after more than two decades of solitary confinement.