By
Zafar
Cooper's
haunted looks sear through. He looks so alone. Out cold inside a black
hole, he yearns, and remembers. It is his daughter--back on Earth that
he had left with a promise. A promise he now knows he can't keep. He has
failed.
***
This
is a film not just about parenthood. It is anthropological in its
canvas. Humankind is struggling to survive, and we see all of our
species' defining features here. It is about humanity's best and worst.
'Mann' lies to ensure his survival. Cooper braves a black hole to send
Brand on her way, wryly quoting the Newton's third law, “The only way
humans have ever figured out of getting somewhere is to leave something
behind.” Brand still loves someone who she hasn't seen in decades, and
is pulled light years towards him. We may be three dimensional beings,
but 'love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends
dimensions of time and space.' For a moment, I am reminded of 'The Dark
Knight Rises' when Mann says, ”Our survival instinct is our single
greatest source of inspiration.” The film seems to be an ode to Murphy's
law--whatever that can happen will happen—as almost every single thing
that could have gone wrong with the mission goes wrong; and to the
Darwin's law of adaptability, when Cooper and Brand adapt to the ever
increasing complexities of their mission to stay alive.
“Once you're a parent, you're the ghost of your children's future.”
Cooper's
predicament is universal. He chooses 'not' to be merely a ghost. He
rises above his immediate goals in favor of his future ones. He wonders.
He plans. Thus he achieves.
“Nature is not evil.”
Cooper
boldly goes where no one has ever gone before--inside the singularity.
For him, Murphy's law is not a pessimistic take on nature, it is about
fairness. That is why he does not give up hope for the future of Earth's
remaining inhabitants, and vaults into the 'gentle’ singularity of the
black hole, even though he has no way of relaying the quantum
information just yet.
“Rage, rage against the dying of the light.”
Dylan
Thomas' famous poem is heard reverberating throughout. And that is how
the action goes. Every character, even Tom fights to save the crop he
grew. Cooper docks into a wildly spinning Endurance defying everyone
around him, because he just couldn't give up. Humanity fights hard to
survive across galaxies, as time watches.
“I'm not afraid of death..., I'm afraid of time.”
Cooper's
primary struggle is against time. He wants to save the future. He is
left maimed by relativity, but he continues on, not caring for the
costs. He is haunted by his memories, but he manages not to become one
himself.
***
Cooper's
survival instincts kick in. He realizes the time tesseract is not a
prison, but a gateway to peer into time. He watches his daughter stare
forlornly towards the bookcase. Can he communicate with her in time? The
harder he tries, the bitter the results are. He sees himself walking
out the door, leaving her bundled up in her fury. He realizes what he
has to do. Humanity was born on Earth, but it was never to meant to die
there. And so it shall be.
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