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christopher “why make it linear?” nolan 

Scene It
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Christopher Nolan might not be everyone's cup of tea, but he is unquestionably the modern master of cinematic time. Here's why, with special reference to Dunkirk (2017).
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Christopher Nolan
Dunkirk
Oppenheimer
Barbenheimer
The Dark Knight
Kenneth Branagh
World War II
Tenet
Memento
Inception
Interstellar
Hans Zimmer
The Prestige
Time
Cillian Murphy
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3 авг 2023

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Комментарии : 167   
@SceneItReviews
@SceneItReviews 11 месяцев назад
Fun Fact: first time I saw Dunkirk I was sitting in the seat next to Geoffrey Rush (Captain Barbossa in Pirates of the Carribean). He cried. But anywayyy, what's your fave Nolan flick??
@noriakikakyoin8841
@noriakikakyoin8841 11 месяцев назад
Tbh Tenet. Essential Nolan with all downsides included
@StrongKinghtStudios
@StrongKinghtStudios 11 месяцев назад
The Dark Knight is my favorite Nolan film. But if I had to pick one that has his signature mark on it, then I would pick the Prestige.
@Adtrevino37
@Adtrevino37 11 месяцев назад
I've always loved The Dark Knight, but after watching Tenet I'm obsessed with that movie. It's more mind boggling than Memento. I also have to disagree on Nolan's exposition "problem". The topics he tries to convey on the screen can not just be shown and understood immediately. They are very cerebral stuff, and to make sure the audience isn't left behind he has to use exposition to move the story along. It doesn't take away from the viewing pleasure in my opinion.
@hylianro
@hylianro 11 месяцев назад
Probably interstellar or inception
@0rland0walkthrough
@0rland0walkthrough 11 месяцев назад
The Prestige, always
@elijahgilleanrodriguez9242
@elijahgilleanrodriguez9242 11 месяцев назад
Nolan loves snorting his time-lines.
@SceneItReviews
@SceneItReviews 10 месяцев назад
snortin' lines and bendin' time
@HonestJohn_01.19
@HonestJohn_01.19 10 месяцев назад
Nobody actively ingesting anything recreationally, drugs, or otherwise by way of nasal cavity actually refers to the act as, "snorting". But rather, "bumping"
@HonestJohn_01.19
@HonestJohn_01.19 10 месяцев назад
Drug abuse 101.
@TheListener22
@TheListener22 10 месяцев назад
@@HonestJohn_01.19 That's weird. My parents always just called it adult alone time
@BelieveInUrself93
@BelieveInUrself93 9 месяцев назад
@@HonestJohn_01.19 lol, this might be true where you're from or in your circle, but it is not at all true elsewhere.
@m3morizes
@m3morizes 10 месяцев назад
The one line "And today I'm the age you were when you left" hits so hard. It feels so real, because time dilation really is possible. That situation could really happen. A father could end up lying to his daughter and lose her, not in life, but in time.
@lumieredufilm
@lumieredufilm 4 месяца назад
haha i wish i knew what this means, sounds profound
@KidsGloves59
@KidsGloves59 11 месяцев назад
Me literally just coming out of Oppenheimer "jeez Nolan really is obsessed with time and timelines, I wonder if there's a video about it on youtube"
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
If you were a true Nolanite, you would know this for at least six years.
@TheGoonSquadd
@TheGoonSquadd 10 месяцев назад
@@johnnotrealname8168 6 years?? Inception came out 13 years ago at this point.
@KidsGloves59
@KidsGloves59 10 месяцев назад
@@johnnotrealname8168 if you read correctly, you'll see i never said I just realized that, I've known this for years. It's just I was wondering how such an obsession would be used in a "simple" biopic, if he'd drop it for more simple storytelling, but nope.
@wistfulgraph
@wistfulgraph 10 месяцев назад
For anyone who hates how he plays with time, it's called a stylistic preference. Christopher Nolan has shown he doesn't need to play with time to create compelling stories. I'm looking at you The Dark Knight. It's just that Nolan prefers to play with time. It's just like how Tarantino likes to play with violence and how David Lynch likes to play with weird vibes.
@moistnugget141
@moistnugget141 10 месяцев назад
How Tarantino like to play with feet*
@2007enthusiast
@2007enthusiast 7 месяцев назад
I’m triggered because imo Tarantino is a greater savant than Nolan. Tarantino has a list of stylistic choices that he uniquely perfected and are much more compelling than Nolan’s insistence on translating impossible theoretical concepts onto cinema (Memento and Inception are really good though).
@string_qbyte
@string_qbyte 6 месяцев назад
Doing something terribly isn't a stylistic preference. He's just an overrated director.
@2007enthusiast
@2007enthusiast 4 месяца назад
Exactly!!@@string_qbyte He veils himself in complexity and obscurity in nearly every film.
@refchannel1167
@refchannel1167 11 месяцев назад
Now I have become Nolan, the Employer of Time Jumps.
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
I swear someone said to the effect of "Now we are Sons of Bitches."
@ryanivancruz8206
@ryanivancruz8206 11 месяцев назад
I just wish we can have infinite number of Nolan films.
@danielkatona8778
@danielkatona8778 11 месяцев назад
Maybe in 15-20 years we will have websites that can generate movies on-demand for free. Like for example: "Generate a 3 hour movie about the fall of Rome in the style of late Christopher Nolan"
@ryanivancruz8206
@ryanivancruz8206 11 месяцев назад
@@danielkatona8778 I'm all for AI advancements but nothing will match the creativity of a man
@danielkatona8778
@danielkatona8778 11 месяцев назад
@@ryanivancruz8206 This exact same this already happened to music, we just don't have a product for it yet. It will come any day now. So I disagree with the creativity comment. I think creativity IS the strength of AI over humans. It can literally be "inspired" by all the content that has ever been published, while we can only explore a small portion of the same dataset with our limited time and brain capacity. (I think intelligence is the real limitation of the current generative models; the ability to work in previously unexplored paradimes. When combining a bunch of existing stuff is just not enough to move forward. That's what the strength of a man is as it stands right now. To put it simply: I would rather compete with an AI in a combinatorics math competition than an visual arts competition.) But even if this won't exactly be possible in the near future. If you can generate text (scripts) and high quality video and sound with nuanced access to modify results based on preferences, then it doesn't even matter: -A hobby moviemaker could curate a list of 100 generated "Nolan scripts" and get inspired by it. Modify it, remove parts, manually add some of his own style to it; or not. -Generate the visuals scene by scene using of Hoyte van Hoytema's art style. If you don't like it, keep generating a 100 more variants or just stick with one and keep perfecting it detail by detail. It might even require a bit of talent to do this, but you could still potentially do this over the course of like a month in you spare time and then upload it to youtube for everyone to see. If making high quality movies was this easy, we would pratically have (almost) unlimited amount of (almost) Nolan movies.
@manea7074
@manea7074 10 месяцев назад
@@danielkatona8778and it would be trash there’s nothing can top human art
@shawnthomas6492
@shawnthomas6492 10 месяцев назад
@@manea7074 right now? true, but wait for another 3-4 years, there is no chance AI wont be able to create decent movies. Wait another 2-4 years after that, it might be on nolans level maybe a bit better. AI evolves at an exponential rate due to the amount of data we have. I work on GANs so I know what is next for generation. People already use AI art to aid in VFX tasks. its just a matter of time it gets implemented everywhere else.
@josephkitchens1644
@josephkitchens1644 10 месяцев назад
My all time favorite director!!! A true master of filmmaking
@randomyoutubecommentersecu7639
@randomyoutubecommentersecu7639 10 месяцев назад
Film making and shooting great visuals? Yes. Great script writer? No. His post dark night rises were pretty average as a basis, except for interstellar.
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
@@randomyoutubecommentersecu7639 I liked Interstellar (2014) although perhaps more as set-pieces. TENET (2020) is a brilliant film however I do think at times it tries too hard to be big bad evil. Solid spy flick though. The crazy thing is thinking about how the ending of the film is both an ending of the mission and the beginning of it.
@eskees9498
@eskees9498 10 месяцев назад
​@@randomyoutubecommentersecu7639who is your favorite script writer? Mine's tarantino
@fulconandroadcone9488
@fulconandroadcone9488 10 месяцев назад
@@eskees9498 I love Tarantino movies, every time they end I keep feeling like nothing happened in the movie but was such a great experience that I want to do it again.
@TheDeathCap
@TheDeathCap 10 месяцев назад
Did you just call Inception average even as a basis? @@randomyoutubecommentersecu7639
@jordanrioscreations
@jordanrioscreations 10 месяцев назад
Gotta love a director that doesnt mind being pretentious
@CircusFreaks666
@CircusFreaks666 11 месяцев назад
Time is the wisest counselor of all.
@Daku2134
@Daku2134 10 месяцев назад
Shit that's deep.
@TheNowhereMan0
@TheNowhereMan0 10 месяцев назад
I love how Nolan plays with time and perception
@andrewsevin330
@andrewsevin330 11 месяцев назад
You know, I’ve never experienced sound issues, at least to my ears, while watching his movies. Weird.
@miked1869
@miked1869 11 месяцев назад
Typically people complain that Nolan's preferred sound design drowns out dialogue. The only one of his movies where I've had that problem is Tenet. I was concerned because people had made the same complaint about Oppenheimer, saying they'd need to watch it again with subtitles, but I actually found Oppenheimer's sound mix fine. Obviously the theatre's sound system has an effect. I watched Opppenheimer on a relatively small screen (sacrilege, I know). I suspect the theatres with the big, booming sound systems actually contribute to the problem.
@microwavecoffee
@microwavecoffee 11 месяцев назад
@@miked1869 Imo subtitles are always good bc often they say like a new name and the brain tries to interpret it like a word, and you spend like 5 seconds trying to process the sound and you miss like half a scene
@miked1869
@miked1869 11 месяцев назад
@@microwavecoffee I have heard that many people habitually watch all shows and movies with the subtitles switched on now. That's quite a turnaround from the days when many people refused to watch subtitled content (but in those days it was subtitled because the audio was in another language). Personally I only use subtitles to go back and check an isolated bit of dialogue that I couldn't make out - or if I'm watching something and have to keep the volume right down to avoid disturbing someone else.
@microwavecoffee
@microwavecoffee 11 месяцев назад
@@miked1869 That's fair. I get the point that looking at subtitles can take away from the viewing for some, but tbh it becomes second nature like breathing after a bit.
@SceneItReviews
@SceneItReviews 10 месяцев назад
He loves peaking the sound for maximum impact in a lot of his films (i.e. the cutaways to the explosion in Oppenheimer), and there’s a bunch of dialogue scenes he seems to intentionally muffle (Tenet being the worst offender). But then again, Sound Mixing is a very subjective thing - so maybe I’m in the minority.
@DeJayHank
@DeJayHank 10 месяцев назад
I'm an absolute sucker for time as a subject in movies, so I don't care what anyone says about a Nolan movie, I'll probably enjoy it.
@rubenroelens4075
@rubenroelens4075 10 месяцев назад
It would be fun to see how Nolan could mess with time if he had the constraint of making a one-shot movie
@eggydrums
@eggydrums 9 месяцев назад
The conflict of the film is time sensitive and essentially lasts most of the film's total runtime :0
@alinkbetweengames4328
@alinkbetweengames4328 2 месяца назад
I can't remember the name, but there was a film that was a one-shot set in three different eras. Most of the scenes were inside a palace, and the camera would often move to a different room to indicate a time shift.
@alinkbetweengames4328
@alinkbetweengames4328 Месяц назад
Found it! It's called "Russian Ark"
@DesignedbyKirk
@DesignedbyKirk 11 месяцев назад
I downloaded this video, cut it up, scrambled the clips together, so I could watch it non-linearly, I go by the name Christopher Nolan now
@user-js2sv1pw2e
@user-js2sv1pw2e 8 месяцев назад
In Inception, he accelerates time, in Interstellar, he dialates time, in Tenet, he inverts time. Nolan is truly a master of time.
@ariochiv
@ariochiv 10 месяцев назад
Jumping back and forth in time can be extremely confusing, as so I think there needs to be a clear, strong narrative benefit to doing so. In _Dunkirk,_ time jumps are deliberately done without any cue (other than the events themselves) as to where you are in the timeline, and they seem to be nothing more than a novelty, a puzzle for the viewer to figure out, without any real narrative purpose that I can see. It's an unnecessary distraction and an unwelcome source of confusion... as if there isn't enough to process in a story like this with so many characters.
@joelbattig1175
@joelbattig1175 10 месяцев назад
All of this only applies if you see movies only as entertainment and not as a form of art. Dunkirk would be any other ww2 movie without those timelines. The timelines show the different aspects of the event while it was happening and thus gave different perspectives. If you couldnt see this thats your problem but I think its perfectly okay to not like it but dont say it was without any reasons
@thekillerprawn
@thekillerprawn 10 месяцев назад
Just because YOU didn't understand it does not mean there is nothing to understand
@stickyblicky11
@stickyblicky11 10 месяцев назад
Skill issue
@CharlesVanNoland
@CharlesVanNoland 10 месяцев назад
It's not pretentious that CN approaches screenwriting so methodically. It's how his passion for making films manifests itself. He doesn't know how to do it a different way. It's how he thinks *he* should do it, and how *he* likes to do it. It's nothing more than that, at least in terms of his ego or having a big head about it. He just likes to see the story visually before it ends up as a long stream of words on a hundred pages in a screenplay.
@GO3TRecon
@GO3TRecon 10 месяцев назад
+ to add on this, the sound & voice of characters are can be barely deciphered on purpose. You are hearing what that guy in the story is hearing, so the character is as clueless as you are while hearing it, so you'll eventually start putting together puzzles & that's the suspense, in ur brain.
@Emuruh.
@Emuruh. 10 месяцев назад
In my opinion, Dunkirk is one of his best - if not his best - work.
@jacktorrance3522
@jacktorrance3522 10 месяцев назад
I'd generally agree but I do wish he'd used just a *bit* of CGI to make it more accurate. Dunkirk itself is far too clean and in one piece relative to how it actually was, and there isn't near enough equipment or men on the beach to fully get across the scale of the evacuation operation. There are also modern day cranes in the background of some shots that could have been removed digitally. I have nothing but the greatest of respect for Nolan doing as much as possible "in camera" but on some things CGI could have really helped Dunkirk be elevated.
@bigusdicus7890
@bigusdicus7890 10 месяцев назад
@@jacktorrance3522 Dunkirk also just ignores the countless British forces at Dunkirk, instead it's all just Englishmen, instead of a blend of Irish Welsh and English, (With Scots regiments at the front holding the Germans off as long as possible)
@martijnprinzen7124
@martijnprinzen7124 6 месяцев назад
@@jacktorrance3522 While I agree, he could have, this doesn't really change the movie. It's just that when you know these things, you want some historical accuracy. It's just a masterpiece in my mind. I've since been disappointed in Nolan a bit. Oppenheimer was decent but could have been better and Tenet is one of the worst movies ever made.
@Raumance
@Raumance 10 месяцев назад
Wow. That filmography is starting to look incredible. Great movie after great movie.
@Rorschach1488_
@Rorschach1488_ 10 месяцев назад
6:15 Nolan does that on purpose and I think it is genius.
@TheOldMan-75
@TheOldMan-75 10 месяцев назад
I wish Nolan was just a technical advisor on other people's films.
@beetleything1864
@beetleything1864 10 месяцев назад
I remember watching Dunkirk and noticing the Ticking sounds - especially with the Spitifires.
@spridgejuice
@spridgejuice 10 месяцев назад
Apart from those rare realtime such as Victoria - can you think of any other realtime films?, let me know in the comments - all movies mess with time, it's called editing!
@Buggyi94
@Buggyi94 10 месяцев назад
Dat ape past the dinosaurs KEEPS, MESSIN, WITH, TIME
@ThomasMichaelShelby19
@ThomasMichaelShelby19 10 месяцев назад
Could you elaborate more on what his exposition problems are? and how would you handle them if you were in the driving seat? I'm keen to learn your perspective since this has been a common notion among the nolan crtics. If you ask my opinion, for each particular script he chooses and the way he chooses to picture and layer it over the span of 10 years-incase of inception or over the span of an year and half-in case of oppenheimer or insomnia..i couldn't fault his jugdement of giving exposition while staying true to his cinematic vision. Not meant to be taken as a jab at you brother, I genuinely wanna know your take.
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
I think his exposition is handled well but especially in TENET (2020). Dunkirk (2017) did not need much but in TENET (2020) there is the big thing, an explanation through show and then implementation and building up more and more and more until the end. Although it does get confusing having to learn so very much.
@i-deni-i5138
@i-deni-i5138 10 месяцев назад
There is motivated and unmotivated exposition in screenwriting. For example Interstellar has a bunch of unmotivated exposition; bunch of space scientists explaining another space scientist how gravity works and stuff. Inception had allot of exposition, but it's motivated since Ariadne for example has to learn about that world, so exposition is justified. Watch his movies and see if you can catch what's motivated and what not.
@ThomasMichaelShelby19
@ThomasMichaelShelby19 10 месяцев назад
@@i-deni-i5138 isn't cooper learning something new when the other astro-physicists are explaining about how time dilation works for the interstellar travel they're about to embark, or during the wormhole scene, so doesn't it count as motivated exposition? I believe cooper was a former NASA pilot, but irrespective of the subjective knowledge he has on the interstellar travel-i guess he genuinely enquires about the mechanics and is taken a back by the "explanation"-by other astro-physicists on the spaceship.
@i-deni-i5138
@i-deni-i5138 10 месяцев назад
@@ThomasMichaelShelby19 yeah, but why doesn't he know about all that? It is shown in the beginning of the film that he's scientifically motivated, yet he doesn't know that gravity affects time or how wormholes are theoretically created? I mean, I knew that and I'm not a NASA employee or former one. To me it just doesn't make sense that he doesn't know about such stuff.
@jjoster
@jjoster 10 месяцев назад
Great director.
@ludgatecircus15
@ludgatecircus15 5 месяцев назад
HOW CAN AN COMBINED INTELLECTUAL AND ARTISTIC FILMS BE PRETENTIOUS? I think that ultimately is an ad hominem comment directed at Nolan. Hate him if you wish, but his art is intellectually strong, challenging, beautiful, and enjoyable to watch. THAT is special.
@paramveersingh5404
@paramveersingh5404 10 месяцев назад
great editing
@franksg2635
@franksg2635 10 месяцев назад
‘Nolan really has some exposition issues’ Cries in the 1 hour slow start to Interstellar
@luminyam6145
@luminyam6145 10 месяцев назад
My uncle was on the Canadian destroyer The Restigouche in WW2.
@RealMansGuide
@RealMansGuide 11 месяцев назад
So I can't put my finger on where I've heard Jack's voice before. Does he do video game reviews or something under a different name or something like that?
@BasedImran
@BasedImran 11 месяцев назад
i was thinking the same thing. a certain australian man from the channel skill up
@Lewis08
@Lewis08 10 месяцев назад
@@BasedImran As was I! Used to watch Skill Up's Division vids ages ago haha
@tomdance8424
@tomdance8424 11 месяцев назад
Quality watch! (time related pun intended)
@AnnihilatorCZ
@AnnihilatorCZ 10 месяцев назад
Nolan is easily the best modern director. Every movie he makes is a cultural event.
@ricardoguzman7518
@ricardoguzman7518 10 месяцев назад
Tarantino, man.
@moonlightning8269
@moonlightning8269 10 месяцев назад
That’s what’s wrong with modern cinema
@awwwHomO
@awwwHomO 10 месяцев назад
Scorsese,Tarantino...
@anypercentdeathless
@anypercentdeathless 6 месяцев назад
His sound mixing and exposition takes into account you watching it many times. But, hey, I have issues with Beethoven sonatas I hear just a few times; so, I get it.
@paddyf5540
@paddyf5540 11 месяцев назад
Hey Jack 😊 thanks for uploading quality content my friend! shoutout from Sydney ❤ love the vids, keep ‘em coming! PS. I was sorry to read about the copyright claims on your vids, hope a solution comes to light
@GoodMrDawes
@GoodMrDawes 10 месяцев назад
A Brilliant Mind
@klarkolofsson
@klarkolofsson 10 месяцев назад
"Il cinema è un mosaico fatto di tempo"
@rome8180
@rome8180 10 месяцев назад
I wish he'd spend less time (pun intended) on clever structure and more time on other aspects of the story. I often feel like his movies use their complexity to hide bad dialogue and flat characterization. His movies look amazing, but they often leave me cold and indifferent. You know that devastating scene in Interstellar where the character watches video of his daughter and sobs uncontrollably as he realizes he's missed decades of her life? I want his films to have more moments like that.
@BalCleric
@BalCleric 10 месяцев назад
Always said our boy Nolan likes a bit o ketamine.
@emmanuelrichard4195
@emmanuelrichard4195 10 месяцев назад
Christopher Nolan: Time Michael bay: mindless action/explosions James Cameron: Expensive CGI/practical effects
@praveenakaash9095
@praveenakaash9095 10 месяцев назад
I love how Nolan has basically made Time his b*tch
@aristeidisk.1254
@aristeidisk.1254 11 месяцев назад
After "every frame a painting" seized uploading videos I was on methadone.... until I found this fucking channel. Amazing job!
@Realsagarbhat
@Realsagarbhat 11 месяцев назад
I knew it.
@PeasantRule
@PeasantRule 10 месяцев назад
Anyone say you sound like SkillUp yet? haha
@meyerdigitalfilm
@meyerdigitalfilm 10 месяцев назад
Could be that you are in a Nolan Film, lol
@pacsmaniac5589
@pacsmaniac5589 10 месяцев назад
🎉
@sneedle252
@sneedle252 10 месяцев назад
Interstellar and Inception were bullshitty but had GREAT elements. Dunkirk was just great. Mans needs to make legible films.
@ModuliOfRiemannSurfaces
@ModuliOfRiemannSurfaces 10 месяцев назад
There was stuff in Tenet that absolutely does not stand up to logical dissection.
@aolson1111
@aolson1111 10 месяцев назад
Such as?
@snehit
@snehit 10 месяцев назад
i think chris nolan overdid the camera work in oppenheimer. anyone agree?
@babayega1717
@babayega1717 10 месяцев назад
I mean Tenet may have haters, but Nolan :D:D Nah bro, Nolan aint got any.
@Slashoom
@Slashoom 10 месяцев назад
Commando is the goat.
@nxwastaken
@nxwastaken 10 месяцев назад
6:12 disagree
@i-deni-i5138
@i-deni-i5138 11 месяцев назад
Dunkirk is his best film, in my humble opinion. I must say, tho, that after Oppenheimer I grow tired of his jump cuts in time. I grow tired of seeing the same structure from him in every single film he releases.
@hamman_samuel
@hamman_samuel 10 месяцев назад
I had it in Tenet
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
Do you just only watch his films or something?
@i-deni-i5138
@i-deni-i5138 10 месяцев назад
@@johnnotrealname8168 no, why? It doesn't make any sense to ask me that question.
@johnnotrealname8168
@johnnotrealname8168 10 месяцев назад
@i-deni-i5138 It does because you grow tired of seeing the same structure but presumably you are seeing different structures with different directors.
@i-deni-i5138
@i-deni-i5138 10 месяцев назад
@@johnnotrealname8168 I'm talking about Christopher Nolan here
@shanewoolsey940
@shanewoolsey940 Месяц назад
The comment section needs to be renamed the poopie pants can't do anything myself hate section
@CircusFreaks666
@CircusFreaks666 11 месяцев назад
Nolan likes snorting his Time_Lines
@eshankshatriya7204
@eshankshatriya7204 11 месяцев назад
nolan loves snorting his time lines.
@bruhlol2744
@bruhlol2744 11 месяцев назад
🤡
@of1300
@of1300 10 месяцев назад
The last thing I felt watching Dunkirk was suspense. Totally flatlined for me, this convoluted snore of a film. Worst of all: historically bullshit and propaganda.
@JohnDaubSuperfan369
@JohnDaubSuperfan369 10 месяцев назад
Nolan's films are incredibly formulaic, stopped watching after Dunkirk, never was a fan of his muted colour palettes either
@JesusIced
@JesusIced 10 месяцев назад
only thing worse than nolan is his fanbois
@zinhoferraz13
@zinhoferraz13 10 месяцев назад
No, Nolan is not damn good at exploring time. Actually I would argue he is one the worst. If you actually want some one that knows how to carefully utilize time to craft his art, I highly recommend Tarkovsky. Specially his film Zerkalo (1975) and his book Sculpting in Time!
@aolson1111
@aolson1111 10 месяцев назад
Why?
@joeber3869
@joeber3869 10 месяцев назад
Great director, poor screenwriter.
@ebrahimkhan9804
@ebrahimkhan9804 10 месяцев назад
The only thing I hate about Nolan, is his damn awful audio mix. He can blather on about its artistic purpose, but if I can't hear jack shit in your movie, then it's a problem.
@Krisdt8
@Krisdt8 10 месяцев назад
Christopher Nolan lost me with Oppenheimer. Why was time manipulation so important? It's pretencious for sure. An attempt to elevate his intellect with overcomplicated drivel. The gimic has well and truely wore off.
@alexsnemos
@alexsnemos 11 месяцев назад
this is why Nolan's movies are more and more predictable. The first 2 or 3 movies were interesting to watch but once you understand their structure they become so much boring
@AnnoyingMoose
@AnnoyingMoose 10 месяцев назад
Dunkirk was SO BORING!!
@slobama
@slobama 10 месяцев назад
Lousy movie.
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