HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentReview | 'Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know' is esoteric yet enthralling, slick yet tedious

Review | 'Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know' is esoteric yet enthralling, slick yet tedious

'Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know', which hit Netflix on June 1, shows a fascinating attempt to capture what a black hole looks like.

June 02, 2021 / 19:32 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
The late Stephen Hawking in 'Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know'. Hawking had four decades ago postulated that black holes exist.
The late Stephen Hawking in 'Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know'. Hawking had four decades ago postulated that black holes exist.

Two years ago, the front pages of newspapers across the world carried an image: a first-of-its-kind picture showing what a black hole looks like. Though the presence of massive black holes was postulated more than four decades ago by star physicist Stephen Hawking, it was only now that conclusive evidence of its presence had been found.

Story continues below Advertisement

Director Peter Galison shows the film in two different streams. One consists of the efforts by a group of scientists in using the Event Horizon telescope to capture images of black holes; the other is by a set of theoretical physicists, including the late Hawking, in writing a paper about black holes.

The Event Horizon telescope is akin to a mirror scattered all across the world, to capture the first black hole in a galaxy called the Messier 87 or M87.