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Essay / Analysis of the film Interstellar - 1538
As it prepares for its fateful launch, a complex emotional continuum takes shape. On the one hand, Cooper feels a strong sense of guilt for abandoning his family, particularly Murph, or the land. Losing a parent or family member is a particularly real and painful situation for many of us. That is why, thanks to the goodwill established earlier, those in the cinema halls feel the same pain in their hearts. Scenes of screaming fights and shedding tears, set to a tragic and melancholy score, only deepen this feeling of pain and anger. One of the last views shown as Cooper flies into the unknown abyss of space is of Murph, a girl who loses her father, looking up at the night sky with tears in her eyes. Even with the magnitude of his father's mission to save humanity, the audience is still left with a painful pang in the heart, much like Cooper.