Production Designer Nathan Crowley based the Endurance's design on the International Space Station: "It's a real mishmash of different kinds of technology; you need analogue stuff, as well as digital stuff, you need back-up systems and tangible switches. Every inch of space is used, everything has a purpose. It's really like a submarine in space."
Murph:
Well, my dad was a farmer. Um, like everybody else back then. Of course, he didn't start that way.
The title of the film is technically inaccurate. Interstellar travel is between stars within a galaxy. According to Professor Brand the 3 potential planets (designated Miller, Edmunds and Mann) are in another galaxy. This required both Cooper's Endurance mission and the previous Lazarus mission to travel from our galaxy to another - which would be defined as intergalactic travel.
The Warner Bros, Paramount, Syncopy and Legendary Pictures logos are brown and dusty, representing Earth's arid dry state in the film.
The 70mm IMAX version is two minutes shorter than the regular 70mm, Digital IMAX, 35mm, and digital projection versions. This is because the end credits are played in an abbreviated slide-show form (rather than scrolling from bottom to top), due to the size capacity of the IMAX platters, which can hold a maximum of 167 minutes of film.
English
$165,000,000 (estimated)
$47,510,360 9 November 2014
$188,020,017
$701,729,127