Some random thoughts on this film (if I may):
I have to say, I'm relieved that Nolan is exploring such different territory. He really seems to have shuffled up the deck and radically changed his "image" or "style", if you will. A drastically different cast that is outside his comfort zone can only be a good thing.
- This feels like a Nolan cast, yet it totally doesn't.
- Plus it's such a wilder sci-fi idea than he's done before.
- It's with Paramount - not just WB.
- And he's not with Wally Pfister anymore.
Only two Nolan veterans returning (Hathaway and Caine)? Awesome.
I might be more excited for this than I was for TDKR, one reason being, it was basically Christian Bale Featuring The Cast of Inception. I really thought we would have a similar problem with Interstellar. It's not a bad thing, but I was worried that Nolan was getting too obvious.
John Lithgow being in a Christopher Nolan movie is incredibly awesome.
Ellen Burstyn being in a Christopher Nolan movie is incredibly awesome.
I love, love, love that Nolan takes chances with actors like Topher Grace and Wes Bentley. That's such a cool move, and nobody of his caliber is really making moves like that.
God, I'm just really, really impressed, relieved, excited, etc.
No Wally Pfister...NOTE: How long will it take before the Internet realizes there are no black people in this cast?
Already saw an article commenting on the "lack of diversity" in the cast.
Funny how someone could make that judgement without knowing what kind f film Nolan is trying to make, or thinking about potential supporting/background actors.

I've been staying out of this thread for the most part, since there hasn't been much news besides casting and also because I want to know as little as possible about this film. But reading back a few pages, it seems some of you have read the script and already know pretty much everything. Is this true?
Yes and no. That script is from 2008, before Chris got his hands on it. And although we know the story and the characters, I personally think Nolan has drastically changed the script.
Hmm. Still surprised some of you would even read it, considering this is a non-Batman Chris Nolan film that would probably best enjoyed by walking in a not knowing what to expect. Aside from the trailers, that's how Inception was for me and it was a really rewarding experience.
Care to offer up any spoiler-free thoughts? The film's overall premise (NOT synopsis), whether the script you read was good or bad, etc.
Excuse my ignorance but do we even know the movie's main plot?