Christopher Nolan Is In Talks With Different Studios For His New Film
by Meenakshi | Fri, 10 Sep 2021 10:53:08 GMT
Image Source: Cinema Daily US, Yahoo Sport UK

Director Christopher Nolan is working on a new film based on the scientist J Robert Oppenhemier of the World War 2 era. Christopher Nolan who recently worked on the spy thriller "Tenet'' featuring Robert Pattinson, John David Washington, Elizabeth Debicki, Michael Caine, and Dimple Kapaadia is now working on a new project which focuses on an American theoretical physicist named J Robert Oppenhemier who played a major role in the development of atom bomb for World War 2.

The new movie isn't being developed under Warner Bros. The acclaimed director has worked for all his movies since 2002 exclusively under Warner Bros Banner. Based on various reports and sources the Hollywood director is in talks with Sony, Paramount, and Universal Studios. The talks with the studios are happening with the highest executive levels.

Tensions between the Warner Bros and the American filmmaker were all-time high after the release of the release of film "Tenet'' which got it's release date push three times due to the devastating pandemic after finally being released only in the theatres, with the 51-year-old wanting to become a catalyst for the audience which unfortunately didn't happen and the movie ended up grossing only $58.4 million domestically.

Source: CinemaBlend

One of the most popular Hollywood directors Nolan's movies have globally grossed an estimated amount of more than US$5 billion and earned 36 Oscar nominations and 11 wins. He has even been named one of the most influential people in the world in 2015 and 2019, The filmmaker generally chooses a more epistemological, metaphysical, and existential centric theme and explores various different concepts such as time, memory, and identity for his absolutely brilliant movies.

Nolan's every movie sets a standard for other directors and his loving audience; his knowledge and use of practical, in-camera effects highly influences early 21st-century cinema. The famous publication IndieWire in 2019 wrote that the filmmakers "kept a viable alternate model of big-budget filmmaking alive" in an era where blockbuster filmmaking has become "a largely computer-generated art form."

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