Interstellar - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Interstellar"
Interstellar (2014)
Timing: 2:49 (169 min)
Interstellar - TMDB rating
8.47/10
39367
Interstellar - Kinopoisk rating
8.674/10
1136275
Interstellar - IMDB rating
0/10
0

Actors and characters

Photo Anne Hathaway #8515Photo Anne Hathaway #8516Photo Anne Hathaway #8517Photo Anne Hathaway #8518

Anne Hathaway

Anne Hathaway
Character Brand
Photo Michael Caine #8561Photo Michael Caine #8562Photo Michael Caine #8563Photo Michael Caine #8564

Michael Caine

Michael Caine
Character Professor Brand
Photo Wes Bentley #2268Photo Wes Bentley #2269

Wes Bentley

Wes Bentley
Character Doyle
Photo Topher Grace #8592Photo Topher Grace #8593Photo Topher Grace #8594Photo Topher Grace #8595

Topher Grace

Topher Grace
Character Getty
Photo Mackenzie Foy #8571Photo Mackenzie Foy #8572Photo Mackenzie Foy #8573Photo Mackenzie Foy #8574

Mackenzie Foy

Mackenzie Foy
Character Murph (10 Yrs.)
Photo Ellen Burstyn #5524Photo Ellen Burstyn #5525Photo Ellen Burstyn #5526Photo Ellen Burstyn #5527

Ellen Burstyn

Ellen Burstyn
Character Murph (older)
Photo John Lithgow #8585Photo John Lithgow #8586Photo John Lithgow #8587Photo John Lithgow #8588

John Lithgow

John Lithgow
Character Donald
Photo Bill Irwin #8010Photo Bill Irwin #8011Photo Bill Irwin #8012

Bill Irwin

Bill Irwin
Character TARS (voice)
Photo David Gyasi #8589Photo David Gyasi #8590Photo David Gyasi #8591

David Gyasi

David Gyasi
Character Romilly
Photo Timothée Chalamet #1103Photo Timothée Chalamet #1104Photo Timothée Chalamet #1105Photo Timothée Chalamet #1106

Timothée Chalamet

Timothée Chalamet
Character Tom (15 Yrs.)
Photo Matt Damon #2764Photo Matt Damon #2765Photo Matt Damon #2766Photo Matt Damon #2767

Matt Damon

Matt Damon
Character Mann
Photo Josh Stewart #8608Photo Josh Stewart #8609Photo Josh Stewart #66940Photo Josh Stewart #66941

Josh Stewart

Josh Stewart
Character CASE (voice)
Photo Leah Cairns #8613

Leah Cairns

Leah Cairns
Character Lois
Photo Liam Dickinson #8621Photo Liam Dickinson #8622
Liam Dickinson
Character Coop
Photo William Devane #8602Photo William Devane #8603Photo William Devane #8604Photo William Devane #8605

William Devane

William Devane
Character Williams
Photo Andrew Borba #8624

Andrew Borba

Andrew Borba
Character Smith
Photo Elyes Gabel #8617
Elyes Gabel
Character Administrator
Photo David Oyelowo #8600Photo David Oyelowo #8601

David Oyelowo

David Oyelowo
Character School Principal
Photo Collette Wolfe #8610Photo Collette Wolfe #8611Photo Collette Wolfe #8612

Collette Wolfe

Collette Wolfe
Character Ms. Hanley
Photo Jeff Hephner #2944Photo Jeff Hephner #2945

Jeff Hephner

Jeff Hephner
Character Doctor
Photo Russ Fega #8614
Russ Fega
Character Crew Chief
Photo Lena Georgas #8615Photo Lena Georgas #8616

Lena Georgas

Lena Georgas
Character Nurse Practitioner
Photo Brooke Smith #8618Photo Brooke Smith #8619Photo Brooke Smith #8620

Brooke Smith

Brooke Smith
Character Nurse
Photo Flora Nolan #3000
Flora Nolan
Character Girl on Truck
Griffen Fraser
Character Boy on Truck
Kristian Van der Heyden
Character Scientist (uncredited)
William Patrick Brown
Character NASA employee (uncredited)
Photo Benjamin Hardy #8626
Benjamin Hardy
Character NASA Scientist (uncredited)
Joseph Oliveira
Character Astronaut (uncredited)
Photo Alexander Michael Helisek #8625
Alexander Michael Helisek
Character Construction boss (uncredited)

Rory Nolan

Rory Nolan
Character Little Boy in the hospital (uncredited)
Photo Bryan Cranston #31877Photo Bryan Cranston #31878Photo Bryan Cranston #31879Photo Bryan Cranston #31880

Bryan Cranston

Bryan Cranston
Character Walter "Walt" White / Heisenberg

What's left behind the scenes

  • Steven Spielberg was attached to the project since 2006 and hired Jonathan Nolan to write the screenplay, but postponed work and took on other films. In 2012, after Spielberg finally left the project, Jonathan Nolan suggested hiring his brother Christopher Nolan as director.
  • When Spielberg was still attached to the project as director, he intended to cast Will Smith in the lead role. Later, after Spielberg stepped down as director, the role went to Matthew McConaughey.
  • This is the first film by Christopher Nolan since 'Following' (1998) shot without cinematographer Wally Pfister. Instead of Pfister, Nolan hired cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema.
  • Initially, Paramount Pictures was involved with the film. When Christopher Nolan took the director's chair, Warner Bros., which had released his recent films, secured a stake in the project. In exchange for international distribution rights, Warner Bros. gave Paramount Pictures the rights to co-finance future sequels to "Friday the 13th" (2009) and "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut" (1999).
  • Irfan Khan was offered a role in the film, but he declined due to scheduling conflicts.
  • Christopher Nolan cast Matthew McConaughey as Cooper after seeing his performance in "Mud" (2012).
  • To offer Jessica Chastain the role, Christopher Nolan sent an assistant to Ireland, where she was filming "Miss Julie" (2014) at the time, with a script watermarked with the actress's name. Chastain was not allowed to keep the script after reading it.
  • Some of the "archive footage" seen in the trailer was actually filmed during the making of this film and then processed with visual effects to appear older.
  • The film was shot under the working title "Flora’s Letter." This title was chosen in honor of Christopher Nolan’s daughter, whose name is Flora.
  • The screenplay is based on the scientific works of theoretical physicist Kip Thorne.
  • In an early draft of the screenplay, the character of Tina was a boy named Murph.
  • The film's 70mm version was shown on only 50 IMAX screens worldwide.
  • During filming, Matthew McConaughey preferred a trailer near the house where his character lived to a hotel room.
  • Christopher Nolan was inspired to create the apocalyptic setting on Earth depicted in the film by a series of catastrophic dust storms that occurred in the United States in the 1930s.
  • During filming, pre-created images of the environment were projected onto screens surrounding the set so that the actors, looking out of the spaceship windows, saw a realistic picture instead of a green screen.
  • Christopher Nolan noted that when creating 'Interstellar', he drew inspiration from such films as: '2001: A Space Odyssey' (1968), 'Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope' (1977), 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind' (1977), 'The Treasure of the Sierra Madre' (1947), 'The Right Stuff' (1983), 'Alien' (1979), and 'Blade Runner' (1982).
  • Before filming began, Christopher Nolan arranged a screening of 'The Right Stuff' (1983) for the actors to help them better understand their roles in the film.
  • The method of space travel in this film is based on the work of physicist Kip Thorne. The same work also formed the basis for space travel in Carl Sagan's novel 'Contact' and its film adaptation, 'Contact' (1997). Notably, Matthew McConaughey starred in both films.
  • Operator Hoyte van Hoytema modified an IMAX camera to allow for handheld shooting of scenes indoors.
  • Some of the space scenes were created using footage shot with an IMAX camera mounted on the nose cone of a Learjet aircraft.
  • Beginning in 2014, Paramount Pictures began phasing out the release of films on traditional film stock in favor of digital formats. However, Christopher Nolan, a staunch advocate for the use of film, insisted that «Interstellar» (2014) also be released in 15/70mm IMAX, 70mm, and 35mm formats, and shown in these formats for two full days before the digital release.
  • To create the space-time tunnel and black hole, Dr. Kip Thorne worked with visual effects supervisor Paul J. Franklin and his team at Double Negative. Thorne provided the team with theoretical materials, which they then used to create new computer programs accurately modeling these phenomena. Processing some individual frames took up to 100 hours. The total volume of computer graphics program data was 800 terabytes. The result of the work gave Thorne a new perspective on the effect of gravitational lensing and the accretion disks of a black hole. This prompted him to write two scientific papers: one in astrophysics and the other in computer graphics. Thorne also discovered new features of light behavior near the event horizon of a black hole.
  • Dust clouds were created using large fans blowing synthetic cellulose-based dust into the air.
  • The lines frequently quoted in the film, beginning with “Do not go gentle into that good night,” are taken from Dylan Thomas’s poem.
  • To gain inspiration for a realistic space journey, Christopher Nolan invited former astronaut Marsha Ivins to the set.
  • When designing the buildings in the film, the creators were inspired by the works of modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
  • The scene explaining the principle of spatial movement using a sheet of paper is a copy of a scene from the film *Event Horizon* (1997).
  • In one scene, Anne Hathaway had to submerge herself in icy water (filmed in Iceland). Her spacesuit leaked, and after several hours of filming, Anne wasn’t sure if she could feel her toes.
  • At the beginning of the film, McConaughey's character flips a coin to the very end of the dusty road; in the next shot, the coin is in the middle of it.
  • When Cooper comforts his daughter, the chain around her neck changes position: it's sometimes under her shirt and sometimes on top, depending on the angle.
  • In one scene of the film, before the protagonist gives his daughter a wristwatch, he hugs her with the hand on which the watch is worn, and the position of the hands on the watch face is visible. In the next shot, when the same watch is handed over, the hands are already in a completely different position, although a very short time has passed.
  • On the ice planet, Mann pushes Cooper off a cliff, but in the following scenes of their fight, the terrain is simply hilly, with no cliff in sight.
  • In the scene where Dr. Mann docks with the 'Endurance' and attempts to enter the ship, he is in the docking bay connecting the two modules. Considering the ship's design, Mann should have been trying to open a door to the right or left. However, instead, he opens a door directly in front of him, which apparently led into open space.
  • The landing scheme for a water planet, drawn by Kup, looks different by the end of the episode (the circle is wider).
  • Steven Spielberg was attached to the project since 2006 and hired Jonathan Nolan to write the screenplay, but postponed work and focused on other films. In 2012, after Spielberg left, Jonathan Nolan suggested hiring his brother Christopher Nolan as director.
  • When Spielberg was still attached as director, he intended to cast Will Smith in the lead role. Later, after Spielberg stepped down as director, the role went to Matthew McConaughey.
  • Christopher Nolan chose Matthew McConaughey for the role of Cooper after seeing his performance in 'Mud' (2012).
  • During filming, Matthew McConaughey preferred a trailer near the house where his character lived to a hotel room.
  • The method of space travel in this film is based on the work of physicist Kip Thorne. These same works served as the basis for the method of space travel in Carl Sagan’s novel 'Contact' and its film adaptation 'Contact' (1997).
  • This is the first film by Christopher Nolan, since 'Following' (1998), shot without cinematographer Wally Pfister. Instead of Pfister, Nolan hired cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema.
  • The film was originally being developed by Paramount Pictures. When Christopher Nolan took the director's chair, Warner Bros., which had released his recent films, secured involvement in the project. In exchange for international distribution rights, Warner Bros. gave Paramount Pictures rights to co-finance future sequels to 'Friday the 13th' (2009) and 'South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut' (1999).
  • Christopher Nolan chose Matthew McConaughey for the role of Cooper after seeing his performance in 'Mud' (2012).
  • To offer Jessica Chastain the role, Christopher Nolan sent an assistant to Ireland, where she was filming 'Miss Julie' (2014) at the time, with a script watermarked with the actress’s name. Chastain was not allowed to keep the script after reading it.
  • Some "archival footage" seen in the trailer was actually shot during the making of this film and then processed with visual effects to appear older.
  • The film was shot under the working title "Flora's Letter." This title was chosen in honor of Christopher Nolan's daughter, who is named Flora.
  • Christopher Nolan noted that when creating "Interstellar," he drew inspiration from films such as: "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968), "Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope" (1977), "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" (1977), "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1947), "The Right Stuff" (1983), "Alien" (1979), and "Blade Runner" (1982).
  • Before filming began, Christopher Nolan showed the actors "The Right Stuff" (1983) to help them better understand their roles in the film.
  • The method of space travel in this film is based on the work of physicist Kip Thorne. The same work also served as the basis for space travel in Carl Sagan's novel "Contact" and its film adaptation, "Contact" (1997).
  • Starting in 2014, Paramount Pictures began to phase out the release of films on traditional film in favor of digital formats. However, Christopher Nolan, a staunch advocate for using film, insisted that “Interstellar” (2014) also be released in 15/70mm IMAX, 70mm, and 35mm formats, and shown in these formats for two full days before the digital release.
  • The lines frequently quoted in the film, beginning with “Do not go gentle into that good night,” are taken from Dylan Thomas's poem.
  • The scene explaining the principle of spatial movement using a sheet of paper is a copy of a scene from the film “Event Horizon” (1997).
  • In the scene where Dr. Mann, after docking with the “Endurance,” attempts to enter the ship, he is in the docking bay connecting the two modules. Given the ship's design, Mann should have tried to open the door to his right or left. Instead, he opened the door directly in front of him, which apparently led into open space.
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