Movie science Memes

Posts tagged with Movie science

Gravity Doesn't Work That Way

Gravity Doesn't Work That Way
From the movie Interstellar , this meme hilariously points out the scientific inconsistency in the famous "time dilation" scene. The first astronaut mentions the extreme relativistic effect where one hour on their water planet equals 7 years on Earth (due to proximity to a black hole). The second astronaut immediately calls out the physics fail - if time dilation were that extreme, the immense gravitational force would have instantly turned them into cosmic spaghetti! Einstein's General Relativity tells us that such dramatic time dilation would require gravitational forces no human could survive. The snarky response perfectly captures how sci-fi movies often bend physics for dramatic effect while hoping nobody notices!

The Periodic Table Doesn't Have A Sequel

The Periodic Table Doesn't Have A Sequel
Every chemist's blood pressure spikes when sci-fi writers invent magical "new elements" not on the periodic table. Like, seriously? We've literally mapped 118 elements, from hydrogen to oganesson. There's no secret element hiding in a cave somewhere waiting to power your spaceship! What's next - discovering that water isn't H₂O but actually H₂OMG? The periodic table took centuries to develop and organize, but sure, your movie alien just casually discovered element number 423 called "Plotdevicium" with the magical property of breaking all known laws of physics. Fantastic.

Hollywood's Favorite Physics Defying Trick

Hollywood's Favorite Physics Defying Trick
The infamous "pen through paper" trick - Hollywood's favorite way to defy the laws of physics! 🚀 In literally EVERY sci-fi show, someone casually performs this impossible feat to demonstrate advanced technology or alien powers. Meanwhile, actual physicists are screaming at their screens because you'd need to break several fundamental laws of matter to pull this off! The pen would need to either quantum tunnel through the paper (requiring impossibly precise alignment of atoms) or temporarily convert to energy and back. But sure, let's just stick a pen through paper and call it "future tech" - much easier than writing actual science! 😂