TIME TO KILL
SFX|August 2020
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN'S QUANTUM SPY MOVIE IS MAKING STAND FOR CINEMA, WELCOME TO THE EPIC, MIND-BENDING REALM OF TENET
NICK SETCHFIELD
TIME TO KILL
AS WITH ANY supersized spy yarn, the stakes in Christopher Nolan’s Tenet are global and sky-high. On-screen, our heroes are fighting to save us from a reality-melting apocalypse. Beyond the screen, Nolan’s out to reboot cinemagoing itself, staring down a pandemic that has closed the world’s communal dream palaces and seen other blockbusters surrender their release dates. It’s the kind of mission even Bond or Ethan Hunt might baulk at. Tenet aims to resurrect the theatrical experience with an adrenalin stab of pure cinema: inventive, muscular set-pieces, continent-spanning glamour, daredevil world-savers, and planet-threatening bastards. Speedboats. Natty tailoring. And enough theoretical physics to fry your skull.

“He wanted to make a film that would give audiences the same feeling he had when he was a kid watching the big action movies,” says Emma Thomas, Nolan’s wife, and production partner. “They had a lot of scopes and transported you to different countries, different places, and were slightly aspirational – you wanted to be that guy. I think ultimately every film that he makes is because he wants to see it.

“When he makes films he thinks about how he would experience them as an audience member. And I think that’s how he connects with the public. He’s very much thinking about what it would be like if he was sitting in that audience, what he would like to see.”

This story is from the August 2020 edition of SFX.

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This story is from the August 2020 edition of SFX.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.