I saw the movie last night and loved it!

Speaking as someone who's afraid of heights, the whole thing gave me the heebie jeebies and was filled with gut-wrenching suspense.
Kumagawa Misogi said:
For a good accurate ripping for how inaccurate this rubbish is, see here.
http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/10/poking-holes-in-the-gravity-trailer-with-nasas-help/
That article makes for an interesting and educational read, but I don't see how they could have included all of those points in the movie and still maintained the intense emotional connection with the audience. For what it's worth, Cuaron has said that he wanted to make the physics of the movie as accurate as possible, but had to make some tough choices to simplify things in order to keep the movie going and not turn half of the movie into dialogue explaining the physics. Personally, I believe he made good choices that didn't significantly take away from my ability to enjoy it and it isn't fair to call the movie "rubbish" because of it. (For that matter, the author of the article doesn't think the movie is rubbish, nor does the NASA official he corresponded with) The whole concept of retrograde burns to drop into faster orbits is fascinating, but the general public knows nothing about that, so it would kill the pacing of the movie if the characters stop to explain everything they're doing.
Nevertheless, just for fun, here's my best impression of how the movie would have turned out, taking everything from the article into account:
It would be impossible to get to the ISS from Hubble because they're in different orbits, so after the debris struck the shuttle, George Clooney and Sandra Bullock would remain adrift until they died. Clooney's fancy jetpack is impractical and unfeasible, so he isn't able to rescue Bullock from tumbling away, so the whole movie is 90 minutes of Bullock tumbling in space, unable to reach anything and for the last 30 minutes of it, she's dead from asphyxiation.
Even better version:
They never go out on the spacewalk in the first place because Houston warned them of incoming debris. They're inside the shuttle, not wearing their spacesuits when the shuttle is hit, so everyone dies of explosive decompression at the beginning of the movie and the rest of the 90 minutes is scenes of floating, lifeless debris.
Sounds like a blockbuster.
