A secret agent embarks on a dangerous, time-bending mission to prevent the start of World War III.
Director: Christopher Nolan
Cast: John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, Dimple Kapadia, Michael Caine, Kenneth Branagh
Release Date:
Genre: Action, Sci-Fi
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, some suggestive references and brief strong language
Runtime: 2 h 30 min
Review:
Christopher Nolan’s latest, Tenet, will leave audiences everywhere talking or thinking about well after the film finishes. Technically, it’s a marvelous piece of grand scale filmmaking with enough thrills to keep nearly everyone on the edge of their seat. It’s everything Nolan has been perfecting over the last decade or so of his career. This puzzle box of a story though is overtly and aggressively complex and convoluted, almost to the point of exhaustion. If you can keep up, the story is multi faceted but simplistic at the same time. If you’ve had any sort of experience with Star Trek or any other sort of time travel story logic, the techobabble spouted out will feel routine but it’s probably best to not over think it too much otherwise you’ll end up with a splitting headache. Needless to say, I’m sure there will be people dissecting character timeline after obsessively rewatching the film. As for the characters that live in this cinematic maze, they are thinly written but it’s not huge issue since the actors and actresses deliver performances that make it easier to gloss over the story’s shortcomings. The best characters moments in the film occur when John David Washington and Robert Pattinson share screen time mainly the two share strong and naturalistic chemistry together. Elizabeth Debicki and Kenneth Branagh do what they can with seriously broad characters that don’t have much in the way of depth. Those critics who complain about Nolan’s emotional distance probably won’t be silenced here since the film keeps Kurbrick like distance from all the characters. Tenet has flaws but those movie lovers that want massive cinematic scopes and action will find plenty to whet their appetites.
B+
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