Interstellar Image 95%
When Cooper enters the black hole, he finds himself in a "Tesseract," a three-dimensional representation of a five-dimensional space.
: The glowing ring isn't just around the middle; gravity is so strong that it bends light from the back of the disk over the top and bottom, creating the "halo" effect seen in the film. Interstellar image
: While many shots used CGI, the film also utilized large-scale miniatures and practical sets to maintain a grounded, tactile feel. When Cooper enters the black hole, he finds
: The visual effects team, led by Paul Franklin and advised by Nobel laureate Kip Thorne, published actual scientific papers on the rendering techniques developed for the film. : The visual effects team, led by Paul
The depiction of Gargantua is considered one of the most scientifically accurate representations of a black hole in cinema history.
: Some single frames of the black hole took up to 100 hours to render due to the complexity of the light-bending physics. 2. The Tesseract (4th/5th Dimension)