Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking
- TV Mini Series
- 2010
- 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
5.6K
YOUR RATING
In this comprehensive cosmology series Stephen Hawking looks at the entire universe, from the Big Bang to the end of time.In this comprehensive cosmology series Stephen Hawking looks at the entire universe, from the Big Bang to the end of time.In this comprehensive cosmology series Stephen Hawking looks at the entire universe, from the Big Bang to the end of time.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Newer than my school days but now getting a tad long in the tooth. Still covers many things that one might have missed.
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E1 Aliens
We get a Stephen Hawking view of Aliens. Makes me think of Carl Sagan on Alien Abduction and Cosmos, who making love to an alien is like making love to a petunia.
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on big galaxies and speculating on alien environments.
There is an annoying English narrator, instead of a good California neutral accent. Drives me up the wall as the narrator cannot pronounce evolution.
We are treated to a compare and contrast to Star Wars and Star Trek. Speculation from spontaneous to asteroids. Just add water. Now voyaging to the vastness beyond our solar system.
He prefers to talk about the observatory in Hawaii. I prefer the one in Griffith Park as I know it. And we are off again into space. Space is alive.
We get speculation on the chemistry of life. The average male hold about 6 gallons of water. This implies that the average female cannot old water.
Stephen Hawking likes as a standard abduction story a person lost alone in nowhere at night. I prefer "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (1958). Again, Carl Sagan preferred petunias.
Looks like we will have to wait and see when they get here.
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E2 Time travel
Free to explore the universe and ask the big questions such as, is time travel possible? Can we open a portal to the past? Or find a shortcut to the future?
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on the nature of time as seen by Stephen Hawking.
There is an annoying English speech impediment, instead of a good California neutral accent. So, several words will be mispronounced.
We need to look at time the way physicists do. The fourth dimension. It sounds almost pornographic as he describes tiny worm holes and their properties. Oh, the space/time type of worm hole.
We are treated to visions of tiny crevasses, wrinkles, and voids. Oh my!
We get a lesson on why we should not Feed the wormhole. Now we look at GPS and its part in time differentials. By this time, you may wat to take a break as concepts move faster. I suspect there may be some fillers. Revisit black holes and light speed. Lots of "Ifs"
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E3 The Story of Everything
Free to tour the universe. We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while going from the big bang to life, to the end of time (or forever.) We get a quickie about dark energy.
There is an annoying English speech impediment, instead of a good California neutral accent.
We get a Newton version of gravity or non-relativistic classical mechanics that treats time as a universal quantity of measurement which is uniform throughout space and separate from space. Instead of an Einstein general theory of relativity, wherein spacetime is curved by mass and energy. The spacetime of special relativity is today known as "Minkowski spacetime."
As some sort of joke, we get how the end of the earth will affect the Japanese stock market.
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E1 Aliens
We get a Stephen Hawking view of Aliens. Makes me think of Carl Sagan on Alien Abduction and Cosmos, who making love to an alien is like making love to a petunia.
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on big galaxies and speculating on alien environments.
There is an annoying English narrator, instead of a good California neutral accent. Drives me up the wall as the narrator cannot pronounce evolution.
We are treated to a compare and contrast to Star Wars and Star Trek. Speculation from spontaneous to asteroids. Just add water. Now voyaging to the vastness beyond our solar system.
He prefers to talk about the observatory in Hawaii. I prefer the one in Griffith Park as I know it. And we are off again into space. Space is alive.
We get speculation on the chemistry of life. The average male hold about 6 gallons of water. This implies that the average female cannot old water.
Stephen Hawking likes as a standard abduction story a person lost alone in nowhere at night. I prefer "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (1958). Again, Carl Sagan preferred petunias.
Looks like we will have to wait and see when they get here.
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E2 Time travel
Free to explore the universe and ask the big questions such as, is time travel possible? Can we open a portal to the past? Or find a shortcut to the future?
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on the nature of time as seen by Stephen Hawking.
There is an annoying English speech impediment, instead of a good California neutral accent. So, several words will be mispronounced.
We need to look at time the way physicists do. The fourth dimension. It sounds almost pornographic as he describes tiny worm holes and their properties. Oh, the space/time type of worm hole.
We are treated to visions of tiny crevasses, wrinkles, and voids. Oh my!
We get a lesson on why we should not Feed the wormhole. Now we look at GPS and its part in time differentials. By this time, you may wat to take a break as concepts move faster. I suspect there may be some fillers. Revisit black holes and light speed. Lots of "Ifs"
Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) S1 - E3 The Story of Everything
Free to tour the universe. We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while going from the big bang to life, to the end of time (or forever.) We get a quickie about dark energy.
There is an annoying English speech impediment, instead of a good California neutral accent.
We get a Newton version of gravity or non-relativistic classical mechanics that treats time as a universal quantity of measurement which is uniform throughout space and separate from space. Instead of an Einstein general theory of relativity, wherein spacetime is curved by mass and energy. The spacetime of special relativity is today known as "Minkowski spacetime."
As some sort of joke, we get how the end of the earth will affect the Japanese stock market.
After viewing this I had many of my questions answered but also brought new questions to mind leaving me wanting more this was absolutely unbelievable and I loved every second of it. It is obvious that Stephen Hawking knows what he is talking about, but to have this whole thing explained the way he did really makes understanding quite easy I was left in awe of the way this was made, the visuals were amazing and I just couldn't stop watching every second eager for what was to be revealed next I hope they make more of these because what I watched wasn't enough to satisfy my curiosity but it certainly gave me a lot to think about so I definitely can't wait for more. If this kind of thing interests you then get ready to be amazed I know I was and I hope you guys will enjoy it as much as I did.
I began watching this only because I wanted to hear the chocolatey baritone of Benedict Cumberbatch, but in about five minutes my nose was glued to the screen.
This stuff is like a Doctor Who episode without the 'fiction' label. I personally found the time travel episode mesmerizing. I definitely recommend this series... especially to people like me who may regretfully lack a very good familiarity with physics. This is very easy to understand, and will blow your mind at least four times a minute.
I am an average young adult (blonde, no less) who got through physics class in high school by memorizing formulas I didn't understand and cramming them into my cranium so I could remember them for an hour long exam, and forget them the second it was over. Why bother to retain it? I was planning to pursue music in college anyway... and I feel like there are all too many people out there who did similar things. Ignored the beauties of physical science to provide more time to do the things which seemed - and undoubtedly were - more important. This is a series which really provides insight into the world of science - the world we all know exists, but often try to ignore, since we know we will never likely have the patience to try and understand it. Beginning to understand this stuff makes you realize why all the annoying genius students in 10th grade would get so obnoxiously excited as they conversed using terms which seemed like other languages.
The possibilities of the universe are really very startling, and very exciting. I recommend this series to anyone who as any interest at all in the potential of humankind.
This stuff is like a Doctor Who episode without the 'fiction' label. I personally found the time travel episode mesmerizing. I definitely recommend this series... especially to people like me who may regretfully lack a very good familiarity with physics. This is very easy to understand, and will blow your mind at least four times a minute.
I am an average young adult (blonde, no less) who got through physics class in high school by memorizing formulas I didn't understand and cramming them into my cranium so I could remember them for an hour long exam, and forget them the second it was over. Why bother to retain it? I was planning to pursue music in college anyway... and I feel like there are all too many people out there who did similar things. Ignored the beauties of physical science to provide more time to do the things which seemed - and undoubtedly were - more important. This is a series which really provides insight into the world of science - the world we all know exists, but often try to ignore, since we know we will never likely have the patience to try and understand it. Beginning to understand this stuff makes you realize why all the annoying genius students in 10th grade would get so obnoxiously excited as they conversed using terms which seemed like other languages.
The possibilities of the universe are really very startling, and very exciting. I recommend this series to anyone who as any interest at all in the potential of humankind.
One word: Amazaing!
This is so damn good and i could watch it over and over again. The time travel episode just cleard my mind and answered me every question i had about time travel into the future and past. This need to be watched.
This is so damn good and i could watch it over and over again. The time travel episode just cleard my mind and answered me every question i had about time travel into the future and past. This need to be watched.
a brilliant series. professor hawking has created something special here - a complex subject made simpler with great examples and explanation , even i could understand - this should be required viewing in every school. the graphic's are absorbing and the dialogue holds your attention so the subject stays fresh. i could have watched this for far longer. if only it had more episodes. the last episode explaining the history of everything was gripping with science's knowledge of how the universe began and how it might possibly end shown with good explanation. the episodes start with professor hawking's computerised voice then another voice takes over after a few minutes of dialogue - at just the right point i think.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in Symphony of Science: The Big Beginning (2011)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Khám Phá Vũ Trụ Cùng Stephen Hawking
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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