CHRISTOPHER NOLAN AND THE QUEST TO UNDERSTAND

This post, the first of a three part series, examines the work of film director Christopher Nolan.

TENET was Christopher Nolan’s eleventh feature film, released to cinemas on the reopening of theatres after the pandemic restrictions were lifted in the US. Like other Nolan films – but even more so – it left many audiences scratching their heads with its very challenging interpretation of our relationship with time, space and technology. Nolan takes no prisoners when it comes to making demands on his audience. His motto is no less than this: “The only thing you can do is trust your initial instincts. You just have to say ‘This is what I’m making. This is what I’m doing. This is why I wrote this script.’ It is going to work. Just trust it.”

In all eleven films, not one of them has failed to repay that trust for anyone who really takes his oeuvre seriously. In a certain way, for anyone who places that trust in Nolan’s instincts, every one of explorations – for that is what they are – replicates the history of his first Hollywood release, Memento.

Tom Shone, in his fascinating study of Nolan, built around occasional interviews with him over practically the entire span of his career, tells the story of Memento’s creation and release.

Memento is a story, told backwards, of a man who after an assault in which his wife was murdered, has lost his short term memory. He is now hunting the perpetrator of the crime. 

After two years pitching Memento to studios and distributors, eventually getting it filmed grudgingly, it was finally released into eleven theatres. It took in $352,243 in its first week. Then word about it got around and in the second week it was in fifteen theatres, where it took in another $353,523. 

Among the distributors who had initially turned the film down, Shone tells us, was Harvey Weinstein’s Miramax. Smelling the coffee they then tried to buy the film. But now, in its third week, it was in seventy-six theatres, taking in $965,519. “Miramax could only watch as the film took off, spending four weeks in the top ten, sixteen in the top twenty, eventually playing in 531 theatres, a larger number of venues than even Jaws played in during the summer of 1975.” The film eventually made £40 million and got two Oscar nominations. They were a heady two years for Nolan, his brother Jonathan who had collaborated with him on the film, and his wife Emma Thomas who became his long-term producer.

After that came Insomnia and with that Hollywood’s “trust” in Nolan’s instincts – helped by his own canny and careful playing of the whole Hollywood machine – was no longer much of a problem. It just became a story of onwards and upwards. The next decade and a half saw this team making such blockbusters as Batman BeginsThe Dark Knight (2008), Inception (2010), Interstellar (2014), The Dark Knight Rises and Dunkirk (2017), between them earning $4.7 billion worldwide.

Michael Mann (HeatThe Last of the Mohicans), one of the dominant directors in Hollywood in the 1990s, says of Nolan, “He works within the system here in a very commanding way. He has large ideas. He invented the post-heroic superhero. He came up with an idea for a science-fiction heist inside the moving contours of a dreaming mind and he had the boldness and audacity to have that singular vision and make it happen. I think that the reason he has such a great response and great resonance with people is because he operates very much in the present, in the now. He’s tuned into the reality of our lives, our imagination, our culture, how we think, how we try to live. We’re living in a post-modern, post-industrial world with decaying infrastructure. Many feel disenfranchised. Seclusion is difficult. Privacy is impossible. Our lives are porous. We swim in a sea of interconnectedness and data. He directly deals with these intangible but very real anxieties. The quest to understand that and to tell stories from there, that is a central motivator for him, I think.”

The late British director Nicolas Roeg (Walkabout) said Nolan worked in the commercial arena and yet there’s something very poetic about his work. They’re marvellously disguised. Memento has this backward-running time scheme, and yet you automatically find yourself applying the situation to oneself, to one’s daily life, which is very strange.”

“Poetic” is a key element in Nolan’s work and this reflects the influence other poets of cinema and one great poet of the twentieth century have had on his work.

Echoing something that Michaelangelo is supposed to have said, Nolan maintains that “I’m definitely a subscriber to the school of thought that when the writer is working, or the filmmaker is working, it’s because you’re uncovering something, like the sculptor carving something away because it was always there.”

Nolan feels that what he does “is based more in artifice and abstraction and theatricality. I feel more of a craftsman than an artist…. I think there are filmmakers who are artists. I think Terrence Malick is an artist. Maybe it’s the difference between saying ‘are you using it to express something purely personal, that comes from inside that you’re just trying to get out there, or are you trying to communicate with people, and tap into their expectations and their experience.’” 

I doubt this distinction. Nolan and these film-makers are both poets and artists – or as Andrei Tarkovsky would have put it, “sculptors in time”.  For Nolan, Malick’s The Thin Red Line is one of the best films ever made. Tarkovsky’s Mirror was one of the influences, particularly in its theme of parent-child relationship, in the making of Interstellar. The only difference between Nolan and other great artists sculpting in time is that he can draw mass audiences to his work.

One of the most impressive things about Nolan as a person is how he never loses sight of the really essential things about our life in this world. 

He observes that “The Prestige was an important film in terms of work-life balance because we’d just had our third child and Emma, even though she loved the project, was quite keen to step back and not be as involved. She wanted to be able to take more of a backseat.” In fact she did not need to. They worked it out as a family. The Prestige was about two obsessive Victorian magicians who ruined their lives and their families because of their obsession. Everything that Nolan – or I should say the Nolans – has done connects with life and living our lives in this world.

Family again became an issue while making The Dark Knight. “The family were around for an enormous amount of the film, but Emma was pregnant with Magnus at the time. The last two months, I think, I was in England, finishing the film, and they had to be back here. I was able to be present for Magnus’s birth; I flew over, but I had to go right back to England and carry on the film. I spent about two months there. To this day, I think that’s the longest I’ve been away from them. I remember thinking, I know it’s more fun when we’re all together and we can do the thing together. That’s why we keep it as a family business. We were learning how to balance those things.”

Nolan communicates with his audience on the basis that it knows the truth: the world is simple. But it also knows its miseries. He sets out to make them wonder at that dichotomy. It would be depressing – if one were to go down Sartre’s existential rabbit hole. He doesn’t. “The reason it’s not”, he says, “is we want the world to be more complicated than it is. It’s pleasurable, because what it’s really saying is there’s more to this place than meets the eye. You don’t want to know the limits of your world. You don’t want to feel this is all there is. I make films that are huge endorsements of the idea that there’s more to our world than meets the eye.” 

That is exactly what poets try to do. 

T. S. Eliot has been one of the poetic and cultural influences in his life. Referring to Four Quartets, Eliot’s very Christian masterpiece about time and memory, he reflects, “I come back to that one a lot: 

Footfalls echo in the memory  

Down the passage which we did not take  

Towards the door we never opened  

Into the rose-garden. 

“It’s very cinematic. All of Eliot is. I think I first encountered Eliot through  Apocalypse Now, where Brando reads parts of The Hollow Men. When I first watched that film, I was so fascinated by that sense of madness and enigma. Then later I read The Waste Land, which absolutely confounded me. I love that poem.”

Nolan’s family and educational background is Catholic and Christian. He attended a thoroughly Catholic prep school run by Josephite priests, who ran a series of seminaries and boarding schools as far afield as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That was followed by pre-university years boarding in an up-front Anglican high school. 

“At the time, it’s like you’re a bunch of kids and they’re the enemy,” says Nolan. “It’s like they’re trying to make you take it seriously and praying, and you’re sort of naturally reacting against that, not in any intellectual way or anything, but I come from that era, the seventies, when there wasn’t any doubt in anybody’s mind that science was supplanting religion.”

Significantly he adds, “Of course, now I’m not sure that’s the case. That seems to have shifted somewhat.” A transition in faith not unlike that of Eliot himself.

In the next post, I hope to look at some of the work Nolan has left us with so far, and in particular to show that those who find themselves bewildered by aspects of it should not be. But before we do that, we need to clarify one thing about Nolan’s use of images and concepts from science in the unfolding of the metaphors with which he shows us the world in which we live, or, scarily, might live. 

In The Divine Comedy, Dante describes Hell, Purgatory and Heaven to us in images created by him using the analogies available to him and his readers in his time. Both he and they knew that those supernatural realities were nothing, are nothing, like his description of them. His visions of them, however, still help us to understand our flawed nature, who we are and what may be in store for us in eternity. 

Nolan, in the imagery he offers us which asks us to think about time, space, the workings of the human mind does not purport to be anything other than reasonably consistent approximations of the science of those things. They are not scientific treatises. I think  people’s bewilderment to a great degree comes from thinking of them as such. The poverty of our poetic imagination in this modern – or postmodern – world often kills our capacity to see the truth of so much of what Nolan the poet-filmmaker is saying to us.

We eagerly await the release this Summer of his latest film, Oppenheimer, which will doubtless give us much more than a simple retelling of the story of the Manhattan Project.

This is a slightly modified version of an article published in the current issue of Position Papers.

Goodness, Truth, Beauty in the Cinema

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At the end of September, Pope Francis, addressing the annual plenary assembly of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications meeting in Rome, said “The challenge is to rediscover, through the means of social communication as well as by personal contact, the beauty that is at the heart of our existence and our journey, the beauty of faith and of the encounter with Christ.”

It is not a totally neglected challenge. The website, Impact Culture (http://www.impactingculture.com) recently published a list of films made in the last decade (in chronological order) – to celebrate the good movies that are still being made.

The Passion, The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, and The Chronicles of Narnia are not on this list. That’s just because they’re explicitly Christian. These others are not.

“The cinema,” Pope John Paul II said, “with its vast possibilities, could become a powerful means of evangelization.” These movies undoubtedly tell some of the “good news”. If you haven’t seen all of them, we must issue a SPOILER ALERT. A lot of them are chosen because of the way they end, so… beware, you’re going to be told how how they end.

Spider-Man (2002)
I remember reading an article by a seminarian when this movie was in theaters, and what he said has stuck with me ever since. He compared Peter Parker to a priest. In the film, Peter’s Uncle Ben tells him, “With great power comes great responsibility.” Peter takes the words to heart – his superpowers are meant for something great, and he has a responsibility to use them for the good of society. What’s more, the weight of this responsibility (this is where the priest bit comes in) means that he must sacrifice his desire to be with Mary Jane, the girl of his dreams. Being Spider-Man is Peter’s vocation.

Finding Nemo (2003)
If you read Uninterested, you probably already know where I’m going with this one. In fact, a few of these films were selected on the basis of this same theme: the theme of fatherhood. It’s a theme that I think resonates with a very broad audience because fatherhood in our culture is so broken. Nemo’s father, Marlin, overcomes all his fears and character flaws, faces death and danger, all for love of his son. The film beautifully explores the meaning and power of friendship as well. The love of friends helps all the characters grow in one way or another to become better people (er… fish).
Also, you should know that I originally had a lot of other Pixar films on this list, but I figured that was a little unfair – Pixar is not the only studio making great movies (although they are probably the only one that consistently makes great movies). So Finding Nemo is basically representing all Pixar films on this list – it just happens to be my favorite one.

Cinderella Man (2005)
This movie, like Finding Nemo, was chosen mainly because of its portrayal of fatherhood, but also because of its broader theme of family. Few films show us a stable, nuclear family anymore. Despite all the obstacles this Depression-era family faces, the audience never worries that Jim Braddock will leave his wife and kids or that his wife will leave him because he can’t provide for them. The family is a source of strength and motivation for Jim Braddock – he does everything he does in the film for the sake of his family, and his family, in turn, is always there to support him.

I Am Legend (2007)
This film actually took me by surprise. The symbolism, especially at the end of the movie, is very obviously Christian. At least it was obvious to me when Will Smith literally gives his blood to save the zombies – his blood is pure, untainted, immune to the disease that has turned the rest of the human population into monsters, and he has spent his years of solitude searching for a way to use his blood to cure them, to make them human again. But as soon as he finds the cure, the monsters are closing in. He sacrifices his life to give a woman and her son a chance to get away, but not before he gives them a vial of his blood – the cure. A man pouring out his blood and giving his life to save humanity from their own depravity… sound familiar?

Lars and the Real Girl (2007)
Far too few people have seen this movie, and when I tell you what it’s about, you might think I’m crazy for putting it on this list. Lars is a reclusive young man whose only real companion is a sex doll he ordered on the internet. But trust me, this movie is not what you think. It’s actually a very sweet story about community. When Lars orders this doll, he succumbs to the delusion that she’s a real person, and we soon find out that this delusion – this illness – is a manifestation of Lars’ fear for his pregnant sister-in-law’s life. The love and compassion of the small town community around Lars helps him to overcome his illness and his fears.

3:10 to Yuma (2007)
This is another father one. Christian Bale’s character is, in a lot of ways, similar to Marlin. He starts out afraid. A coward. But by movie’s end, he’s stepping in front of bullets for his son. There’s also something beautiful here about Russell Crowe’s character. He’s evil through and through for almost the entire movie. But by the end, we see the flicker of mercy and nobility.

The Dark Knight (2008)
Like I Am Legend, I think the Christian symbolism in this one is hard to miss. Batman chooses to take on the sins of another. Putting his physical life on the line for others is nothing new – he’s always done that. But this time around, he’s willing to be counted among sinners and thieves for the sake of Gotham City.

The Blind Side (2009)
This one’s almost too easy – I debated putting this one in the same category with LOTR and The Passion. I really don’t think the filmmakers realized what they had on their hands, though, so I’m putting it on the list. This movie shows us what it really means to put our money where our mouth is as Christians. The themes of family, honesty, integrity, and courage are all explored in this little gem.

The King’s Speech (2010)
There’s nothing obviously Christian about this film, but I love it for its portrayal of marriage. The king has a strong, happy marriage as does his speech therapist. The husbands love their wives, and the wives support their husbands. It strikes me now that I’m writing this that the films I’ve chosen for their portrayal of marriage and family are period pieces… interesting. Anyway, there’s also a lot here about duty and courage and patriotism too.

Tangled (2010)
Okay, this is my one cheat. I chose this movie more for what it’s not than for what it is. I want to draw a comparison here between this movie and The Princess and the Frog. I was a little disturbed by the latter, and it really put me in doubt about Disney’s ability to deliver quality children’s movies. The prominence of voodoo and the assertion that voodoo can be good just really rubbed me the wrong way – probably because I know that the voodoo culture actually exists and thrives in some regions. Tangled, on the other hand, is purely fairytale. It’s set in an imaginary place, and the “magic” in it is not rooted in reality in any way. Plus, Rapunzel is one of the better heroines I’ve seen in recent times – a strong, driving protagonist, but still completely feminine.