Nice and easy, Mr. Cooper. Remember, you're no spring chicken anymore. Actually, you are 124 years old.
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6.5s
Murph, the fire's out! Come on! Even if you communicate it here, she won't understand its significance for years.
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5.9s
Don't you know who we are, Coop? No, professor, I don't. You know my father, Professor Brand.
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10.5s
What sort of anomaly? I hesitate to term it supernatural, but it definitely wasn't scientific. You're going to have to be specific, Mr. Cooper. Right now. It was gravity.
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1.3s
Blight.
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17s
Um, what sort of gravitational anomaly? Where was this? Now, I'm real happy that you're excited about gravity, bud... but you're not getting any answers from us until I get assurances. - Assurances? - Yeah. Like, that we're getting out of here. And I don't mean in the trunk of some car.
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2.4s
- NASA? - NASA.
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7.1s
Mostly small distortions to our instruments in the upper atmosphere. In fact, I believe you encountered one yourself.
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4s
You don't have the resources to visit all 12. No.
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1m8s
We're not meant to save the world. We're meant to leave it. Rangers. The last components of our one versatile ship in orbit, the Endurance. Our final expedition. You sent people out there looking for a new home? The Lazarus missions. - Oh, that sounds cheerful. - Lazarus came back from the dead. Sure, but he had to die in the first place. There's not a planet in our solar system that could sustain life... and the nearest star's over a thousand years away. That doesn't even qualify as futile. Where'd you send them? Cooper... I can't tell you anymore unless you agree... to pilot this craft. - You're the best pilot we ever had. - I barely left the stratosphere. This team never left the simulator. We need a pilot, and this is the mission that you were trained for. Without even knowing it? An hour ago, you didn't even know I was alive. You were going anyway. We had no choice. But something sent you here.
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34.7s
They're not "beings." They're us. What I've been doing for Murph, they're doing for me. For all of us. Cooper, people couldn't build this. No. No, not yet. But one day. Not you and me. But people. A civilization that's evolved past the four dimensions we know. What happens now?
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1.3s
Okay.
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2.2s
Yeah, over the Straights.
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15.7s
Did it work? I think it might have. How do you know? Because the bulk beings are closing the tesseract. Don't you get it yet, TARS?
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5.7s
But such complicated data to a child? Not just any child. What else?
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3m17s
I get that, TARS. But we've got to figure something out or the people on Earth are gonna die. Think! Cooper... they didn't bring us here to change the past. Say that again. They didn't bring us here to change the past. No, they didn't bring us here at all. We brought ourselves. TARS, give me the coordinates for NASA in binary. In binary. Roger. Feeding data. "It's not a ghost." "it's gravity." Don't you get it yet, TARS? I brought myself here! We're here to communicate with the three-dimensional world. We're the bridge! I thought they chose me. - But they didn't choose me, they chose her. For what, Cooper? To save the world. All of this is one little girl's bedroom. Every moment. It's infinitely complex. They have access to infinite time and space, but they're not bound by anything! They can't find a specific place in time. They can't communicate. That's why I'm here. I'm gonna find a way to tell Murph... just like I found this moment. - How, Cooper? - Love, TARS, love. It's just like Brand said. My connection with Murph, it is quantifiable. it's the key! What are we here to do? Find how to tell her. The watch. The watch. That's it. We code the data into the movement of the second hand. TARS, translate the data into Morse and feed it to me. Translating data to Morse. Cooper, what if she never came back for it? She will. She will. Murph, I can see his car! He's coming, Murph! Okay. I'm coming down. How do you know? Because I gave it to her.
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30.1s
Dash, dash, dash. He came back! It was him all the time! I didn't know. it was him! Dad's gonna save us.
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10.1s
Data transmission back through the wormhole is rudimentary. Simple binary pings on an annual basis give us some clue as to which worlds have potential. And one system shows promise.