i dont care much for the dialogue and a few plotholes.. but the visual
experience was great...I would see  it again for the water filled planet
and the rocky icy one .... i wouldnt want to watch it on a laptop... plus
despite what  people say , Hans  Zimmer"s music works for me.. the only
scene i found extremely funny was when Dr Mann Attacks Cooper in the middle
of nowhere But then finally carelessly opens the door of the shuttle and
dies... thats dumb for a man who would brawl on some remote planet just to
get back to Earth...

On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 10:40 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:

> Looked a bit soppy to me Pol.  Too much of that humanity rubbish.  Only
> seen the first half of a youtube knock off.
>
>
> On Wednesday, November 12, 2014 11:51:56 AM UTC, pol.science kid wrote:
>>
>> Interstellar.. awesome
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 11:27 PM, pindleton <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> I have a general "what if" question.
>>>
>>> Do you guys think that it could be possible that individual universes
>>> lie within black holes?
>>>
>>> I ask this because to me, it seems a very logical possibility. Our
>>> universe began with a "big bang." Could this big bang have not been the
>>> creation of a black hole within another universe?
>>>
>>> Within our universe, we predict that black holes should exist. Yet, even
>>> if they do, we cannot look into them, and the data from within a black hole
>>> is unintelligible. Light cannot escape the gravitational forces of a black
>>> hole, and therefore, no data can escape. That means a black hole, is, at
>>> least in my mind, a self contained universe.
>>>
>>> Some physicists have said that black holes can die, and that energy does
>>> escape black holes (in the form of unintelligible radiation) . They also
>>> say that there is this force called "dark matter" which should comprise a
>>> huge % of our universe, yet is somehow undetectable. On top of that it
>>> appears that our universe is expanding faster than the speed of light.
>>>
>>> Is it not then possible that the dark matter that we believe to exist is
>>> the data surrounding our "black hole" that is being pulled into our
>>> universe, and that the reason that we observe faster than light growth of
>>> our universe is because our black hole is expanding (a.k.a. feeding).
>>>
>>> What I mean to say, is that if we are indeed a black hole within another
>>> universe, anything that our black hole feeds upon, when it enters our black
>>> hole universe would be unintelligible "dark matter," and since our black
>>> hole would theoretically grow bigger, wouldn't this mean that our universe
>>> would HAVE to expand?
>>>
>>> I'm no physicist, but I just want to know what you guys think....
>>>
>>>  --
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> EverComing
>>
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