![]() In all likelihood, beings from another dimension reached out to give the humans in our world a helping hand when things got really rough to maintain a sense of harmony in the time-space continuum. One explanation is that Interstellar deals with alternate realties and universes, meaning that a non-linear timeline is possible. But if things were so dire humanity was about to get wiped out, how did future humans accomplish this to begin with? In Interstellar's third act, Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) drops himself into the back hole and he lands inside a tesseract that was placed there by so-called "future humans." This enables him to communicate with his daughter Murph (Jessica Chastain) and give her the information she needs to save the people of Earth. He couldn't save Llewelyn or stop Chigurh, so the only left was to retire.Ĭhristopher Nolan left even the most attentive viewers puzzled with his 2014 sci-fi epic. Bell is in essence the movie's true protagonist, as the story is about him realizing he's done all he can and the world is moving too fast for him to keep up. Everything moviegoers need to know is in the title. Bell was reflecting upon his life and how now it was probably time for him for move on and join his father, wherever he went. Viewers were so invested in Anton's pursuit of Llewelyn that most missed how this sequence conveys the main theme of No Country for Old Men. The film ends with Ed saying "And then I woke up" before fading to black. Recently retied sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones) tells his wife about a dream involving his later father, in which he rides past Bell to go light a fire somewhere. Instead of seeing an old fashioned Western shootout, the Coen brothers' Best Picture winner was criticized by some for ending rather anticlimactically, as villain Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) kills Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) off-screen and escapes from the authorities.
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