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Why this way of making earth uninhabitable in Interstellar?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowCondition of Earth in InterstellarIn what time does Interstellar take place?Spaceship to transport human in interstellarCondition of Earth in InterstellarWhy single way communication in Interstellar?Interstellar movie black hole concept?Why no stars in Interstellar?How many years away from Earth did Cooper experience in Interstellar?Which Star do we see at the end of Interstellar?Why does the Endurance rotate in Interstellar?Wrong rotation of Endurance in Interstellar?










8















In Interstellar we see that in Earth's future, a global crop blight and second Dust Bowl are slowly rendering the planet uninhabitable.



However, current projections are the scarcity of oil, pollution of air, global warming etc. Based on this it seems more likely to end the world using untimely rains, raise of seawater level, end of resources like oil, unbreathable air, unmanagable dump of the likes of Wall-E, overusage of plastic resulting in the extinction of many species which humans depend on, etc.



Why did Nolan choose the Dust Bowl concept, which is a phenomenon local to some geographies?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

    – Napoleon Wilson
    yesterday







  • 1





    Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

    – Zaid Syed M Md
    yesterday















8















In Interstellar we see that in Earth's future, a global crop blight and second Dust Bowl are slowly rendering the planet uninhabitable.



However, current projections are the scarcity of oil, pollution of air, global warming etc. Based on this it seems more likely to end the world using untimely rains, raise of seawater level, end of resources like oil, unbreathable air, unmanagable dump of the likes of Wall-E, overusage of plastic resulting in the extinction of many species which humans depend on, etc.



Why did Nolan choose the Dust Bowl concept, which is a phenomenon local to some geographies?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

    – Napoleon Wilson
    yesterday







  • 1





    Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

    – Zaid Syed M Md
    yesterday













8












8








8


0






In Interstellar we see that in Earth's future, a global crop blight and second Dust Bowl are slowly rendering the planet uninhabitable.



However, current projections are the scarcity of oil, pollution of air, global warming etc. Based on this it seems more likely to end the world using untimely rains, raise of seawater level, end of resources like oil, unbreathable air, unmanagable dump of the likes of Wall-E, overusage of plastic resulting in the extinction of many species which humans depend on, etc.



Why did Nolan choose the Dust Bowl concept, which is a phenomenon local to some geographies?










share|improve this question
















In Interstellar we see that in Earth's future, a global crop blight and second Dust Bowl are slowly rendering the planet uninhabitable.



However, current projections are the scarcity of oil, pollution of air, global warming etc. Based on this it seems more likely to end the world using untimely rains, raise of seawater level, end of resources like oil, unbreathable air, unmanagable dump of the likes of Wall-E, overusage of plastic resulting in the extinction of many species which humans depend on, etc.



Why did Nolan choose the Dust Bowl concept, which is a phenomenon local to some geographies?







interstellar






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









OrangeDog

1,9231218




1,9231218










asked yesterday









Zaid Syed M MdZaid Syed M Md

9331720




9331720







  • 1





    This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

    – Napoleon Wilson
    yesterday







  • 1





    Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

    – Zaid Syed M Md
    yesterday












  • 1





    This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

    – Napoleon Wilson
    yesterday







  • 1





    Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

    – Zaid Syed M Md
    yesterday







1




1





This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

– Napoleon Wilson
yesterday






This is somewhat touched upon a little in the answers to this question.

– Napoleon Wilson
yesterday





1




1





Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

– Zaid Syed M Md
yesterday





Indeed I wanted to add that question in mine as a reference. However, that question seeks in-universe answer and mine out-of-universe

– Zaid Syed M Md
yesterday










1 Answer
1






active

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votes


















11














Nolan chose the blight and the Dust Bowl because they are non-specific environmental crises. The movie is about mankind starting that journey again and exploring space. And these catastrophes provide a reason for leaving earth, are interesting to film, based in history and science, and are not too politically charged (else the movie might just have been viewed as being about a political message, not the Nolans' actual one).



From a 2014 Collider interview by Steve Weintraub with the people behind Interstellar (not just Christopher):




Question: There was an underlying message of environmental pollution and it’s going to raise some discussion, what were you looking at as far as the message you were trying to bring out?



CHRISTOPHER NOLAN: I don’t like to talk about messages so much with films simply because it’s a little more didactic. The reason I’m a filmmaker is to tell stories and so you hope that they will have resonance for people and for the kind of things you’re talking about, but what I always loved about Jonah’s original draft, and we always retained this, was the idea of blight, the idea of there being an agricultural crisis, which has happened historically if you look at the potato famine and so forth. We combined this with ideas taken very much from Ken Burns documentary on the Dust Bowl and spoke to Ken at great length and availed ourselves of his resources, because what struck me about the dust bowl is it was man-made environmental crisis, but one where the imagery – the effect of it was so outlandish we actually had to tone it down for what we put in the film. But the real point is they’re non-specific, that we’re saying that in our story man-kind is being gently nudged off the planet by the earth itself and the reason is non-specific, because we don’t want to be too didactic or too political about it. That’s not really the point. For me it goes back to something Emma said earlier, which was that my excitement about the project was addressing a possibly extremely negative idea, in terms of the planet having had enough of us and suggesting that we go somewhere else, but that being an opportunity, that being a great exciting adventure to be on was something I found very winning about it.




On the idea behind the movie




Jonathan Nolan: So I was rooted in the optimism of what is the next moment in which we start to journey again.



Christopher Nolan: The idea being that with this story you could view the earth as the nest and one day we leave the nest, or the earth is the egg and the egg hatches and we go.







share|improve this answer
































    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    11














    Nolan chose the blight and the Dust Bowl because they are non-specific environmental crises. The movie is about mankind starting that journey again and exploring space. And these catastrophes provide a reason for leaving earth, are interesting to film, based in history and science, and are not too politically charged (else the movie might just have been viewed as being about a political message, not the Nolans' actual one).



    From a 2014 Collider interview by Steve Weintraub with the people behind Interstellar (not just Christopher):




    Question: There was an underlying message of environmental pollution and it’s going to raise some discussion, what were you looking at as far as the message you were trying to bring out?



    CHRISTOPHER NOLAN: I don’t like to talk about messages so much with films simply because it’s a little more didactic. The reason I’m a filmmaker is to tell stories and so you hope that they will have resonance for people and for the kind of things you’re talking about, but what I always loved about Jonah’s original draft, and we always retained this, was the idea of blight, the idea of there being an agricultural crisis, which has happened historically if you look at the potato famine and so forth. We combined this with ideas taken very much from Ken Burns documentary on the Dust Bowl and spoke to Ken at great length and availed ourselves of his resources, because what struck me about the dust bowl is it was man-made environmental crisis, but one where the imagery – the effect of it was so outlandish we actually had to tone it down for what we put in the film. But the real point is they’re non-specific, that we’re saying that in our story man-kind is being gently nudged off the planet by the earth itself and the reason is non-specific, because we don’t want to be too didactic or too political about it. That’s not really the point. For me it goes back to something Emma said earlier, which was that my excitement about the project was addressing a possibly extremely negative idea, in terms of the planet having had enough of us and suggesting that we go somewhere else, but that being an opportunity, that being a great exciting adventure to be on was something I found very winning about it.




    On the idea behind the movie




    Jonathan Nolan: So I was rooted in the optimism of what is the next moment in which we start to journey again.



    Christopher Nolan: The idea being that with this story you could view the earth as the nest and one day we leave the nest, or the earth is the egg and the egg hatches and we go.







    share|improve this answer





























      11














      Nolan chose the blight and the Dust Bowl because they are non-specific environmental crises. The movie is about mankind starting that journey again and exploring space. And these catastrophes provide a reason for leaving earth, are interesting to film, based in history and science, and are not too politically charged (else the movie might just have been viewed as being about a political message, not the Nolans' actual one).



      From a 2014 Collider interview by Steve Weintraub with the people behind Interstellar (not just Christopher):




      Question: There was an underlying message of environmental pollution and it’s going to raise some discussion, what were you looking at as far as the message you were trying to bring out?



      CHRISTOPHER NOLAN: I don’t like to talk about messages so much with films simply because it’s a little more didactic. The reason I’m a filmmaker is to tell stories and so you hope that they will have resonance for people and for the kind of things you’re talking about, but what I always loved about Jonah’s original draft, and we always retained this, was the idea of blight, the idea of there being an agricultural crisis, which has happened historically if you look at the potato famine and so forth. We combined this with ideas taken very much from Ken Burns documentary on the Dust Bowl and spoke to Ken at great length and availed ourselves of his resources, because what struck me about the dust bowl is it was man-made environmental crisis, but one where the imagery – the effect of it was so outlandish we actually had to tone it down for what we put in the film. But the real point is they’re non-specific, that we’re saying that in our story man-kind is being gently nudged off the planet by the earth itself and the reason is non-specific, because we don’t want to be too didactic or too political about it. That’s not really the point. For me it goes back to something Emma said earlier, which was that my excitement about the project was addressing a possibly extremely negative idea, in terms of the planet having had enough of us and suggesting that we go somewhere else, but that being an opportunity, that being a great exciting adventure to be on was something I found very winning about it.




      On the idea behind the movie




      Jonathan Nolan: So I was rooted in the optimism of what is the next moment in which we start to journey again.



      Christopher Nolan: The idea being that with this story you could view the earth as the nest and one day we leave the nest, or the earth is the egg and the egg hatches and we go.







      share|improve this answer



























        11












        11








        11







        Nolan chose the blight and the Dust Bowl because they are non-specific environmental crises. The movie is about mankind starting that journey again and exploring space. And these catastrophes provide a reason for leaving earth, are interesting to film, based in history and science, and are not too politically charged (else the movie might just have been viewed as being about a political message, not the Nolans' actual one).



        From a 2014 Collider interview by Steve Weintraub with the people behind Interstellar (not just Christopher):




        Question: There was an underlying message of environmental pollution and it’s going to raise some discussion, what were you looking at as far as the message you were trying to bring out?



        CHRISTOPHER NOLAN: I don’t like to talk about messages so much with films simply because it’s a little more didactic. The reason I’m a filmmaker is to tell stories and so you hope that they will have resonance for people and for the kind of things you’re talking about, but what I always loved about Jonah’s original draft, and we always retained this, was the idea of blight, the idea of there being an agricultural crisis, which has happened historically if you look at the potato famine and so forth. We combined this with ideas taken very much from Ken Burns documentary on the Dust Bowl and spoke to Ken at great length and availed ourselves of his resources, because what struck me about the dust bowl is it was man-made environmental crisis, but one where the imagery – the effect of it was so outlandish we actually had to tone it down for what we put in the film. But the real point is they’re non-specific, that we’re saying that in our story man-kind is being gently nudged off the planet by the earth itself and the reason is non-specific, because we don’t want to be too didactic or too political about it. That’s not really the point. For me it goes back to something Emma said earlier, which was that my excitement about the project was addressing a possibly extremely negative idea, in terms of the planet having had enough of us and suggesting that we go somewhere else, but that being an opportunity, that being a great exciting adventure to be on was something I found very winning about it.




        On the idea behind the movie




        Jonathan Nolan: So I was rooted in the optimism of what is the next moment in which we start to journey again.



        Christopher Nolan: The idea being that with this story you could view the earth as the nest and one day we leave the nest, or the earth is the egg and the egg hatches and we go.







        share|improve this answer















        Nolan chose the blight and the Dust Bowl because they are non-specific environmental crises. The movie is about mankind starting that journey again and exploring space. And these catastrophes provide a reason for leaving earth, are interesting to film, based in history and science, and are not too politically charged (else the movie might just have been viewed as being about a political message, not the Nolans' actual one).



        From a 2014 Collider interview by Steve Weintraub with the people behind Interstellar (not just Christopher):




        Question: There was an underlying message of environmental pollution and it’s going to raise some discussion, what were you looking at as far as the message you were trying to bring out?



        CHRISTOPHER NOLAN: I don’t like to talk about messages so much with films simply because it’s a little more didactic. The reason I’m a filmmaker is to tell stories and so you hope that they will have resonance for people and for the kind of things you’re talking about, but what I always loved about Jonah’s original draft, and we always retained this, was the idea of blight, the idea of there being an agricultural crisis, which has happened historically if you look at the potato famine and so forth. We combined this with ideas taken very much from Ken Burns documentary on the Dust Bowl and spoke to Ken at great length and availed ourselves of his resources, because what struck me about the dust bowl is it was man-made environmental crisis, but one where the imagery – the effect of it was so outlandish we actually had to tone it down for what we put in the film. But the real point is they’re non-specific, that we’re saying that in our story man-kind is being gently nudged off the planet by the earth itself and the reason is non-specific, because we don’t want to be too didactic or too political about it. That’s not really the point. For me it goes back to something Emma said earlier, which was that my excitement about the project was addressing a possibly extremely negative idea, in terms of the planet having had enough of us and suggesting that we go somewhere else, but that being an opportunity, that being a great exciting adventure to be on was something I found very winning about it.




        On the idea behind the movie




        Jonathan Nolan: So I was rooted in the optimism of what is the next moment in which we start to journey again.



        Christopher Nolan: The idea being that with this story you could view the earth as the nest and one day we leave the nest, or the earth is the egg and the egg hatches and we go.








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








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        Anne DauntedAnne Daunted

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