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The Protagonist returns to Kat, asking for her help to meet her husband Sator. Kat arranges for the Protagonist to come to a dinner party hosted by her husband. However, Sator does not trust the Protagonist. The Protagonist is able to bargain for his life by offering to steal weapons grade plutonium for Sator. The operation to steal the plutonium from an armored car is successful, but interrupted by a time-reversed vehicle. It is eventually revealed that Sator and his gang are operating a 'temporal pincer movement' in which they participate both forwards and backwards in time, by means of entering a 'temporal stile' following the operation and then moving backwards through time. At the temporal junction, Sator shoots Kat in the abdomen and leaves with her before the secret service arrives to secure the temporal stile. The Protagonist is then able to follow Sator back through the temporal stile, where he turns out to be the driver of the time-reversed car. The Protagonist is able to rescue Kat, but unable to prevent Sator from acquiring the plutonium. | The Protagonist returns to Kat, asking for her help to meet her husband Sator. Kat arranges for the Protagonist to come to a dinner party hosted by her husband. However, Sator does not trust the Protagonist. The Protagonist is able to bargain for his life by offering to steal weapons grade plutonium for Sator. The operation to steal the plutonium from an armored car is successful, but interrupted by a time-reversed vehicle. It is eventually revealed that Sator and his gang are operating a 'temporal pincer movement' in which they participate both forwards and backwards in time, by means of entering a 'temporal stile' following the operation and then moving backwards through time. At the temporal junction, Sator shoots Kat in the abdomen and leaves with her before the secret service arrives to secure the temporal stile. The Protagonist is then able to follow Sator back through the temporal stile, where he turns out to be the driver of the time-reversed car. The Protagonist is able to rescue Kat, but unable to prevent Sator from acquiring the plutonium. | ||
It is revealed that Sator plans to use the plutonium to set off a device that will reverse entropy for the entire planet, killing everyone. Sator is dying from pancreatic cancer and if he is to die, he doesn't anyone else to live either. Sator plans to return to a time in the past when he was happy with his wife and then set off the device, which is connected to a dead man's switch linked to his heartbeat. The Protagonist, Neil and Kat follow Sator backwards in time, travelling in a cargo ship container back to Oslo. They infiltrate the freeport art storage facility once again, where they enter another temporal stile that allows Kat to move forwards through time again and have her gunshot wound healed, and where it is also revealed that the Protagonist was in fact the masked assailant during their first operation in this location. Further back in the past, a military operation is then launched whereby The Protagonist and Neil attempt to retrieve the doomsday device from an abandoned Soviet era city, while Kat is with her husband on his yacht, aiming to prevent him from killing himself before the doomsday device is retrieved. Kat kills Sator, but The Protagonist and Neil are able to retrieve the doomsday device in time. During this operation, the Protagonist notices that Neil has a red string on his back and that he was therefore the masked man who saved him at the beginning of the film. The Protagonist then travels further back in time, helping to protect Kat from being killed by Priya, and revealing that he has been the leading the organisation for a further two years in the past. | It is revealed that Sator plans to use the plutonium to set off a device that will reverse entropy for the entire planet, killing everyone. Sator is dying from pancreatic cancer and if he is to die, he doesn't want anyone else to live either. Sator plans to return to a time in the past when he was happy with his wife and then set off the device, which is connected to a dead man's switch linked to his heartbeat. The Protagonist, Neil and Kat follow Sator backwards in time, travelling in a cargo ship container back to Oslo. They infiltrate the freeport art storage facility once again, where they enter another temporal stile that allows Kat to move forwards through time again and have her gunshot wound healed, and where it is also revealed that the Protagonist was in fact the masked assailant during their first operation in this location. Further back in the past, a military operation is then launched whereby The Protagonist and Neil attempt to retrieve the doomsday device from an abandoned Soviet era city, while Kat is with her husband on his yacht, aiming to prevent him from killing himself before the doomsday device is retrieved. Kat kills Sator, but The Protagonist and Neil are able to retrieve the doomsday device in time. During this operation, the Protagonist notices that Neil has a red string on his back and that he was therefore the masked man who saved him at the beginning of the film. The Protagonist then travels further back in time, helping to protect Kat from being killed by Priya, and revealing that he has been the leading the organisation for a further two years in the past. | ||
== Cast == | == Cast == |
Revision as of 15:24, 23 August 2020
upcoming film by Christopher Nolan
Tenet | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Christopher Nolan |
Written by | Christopher Nolan |
Produced by |
|
Starring | |
Cinematography | Hoyte van Hoytema |
Edited by | Jennifer Lame |
Music by | Ludwig Göransson |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 150 minutes |
Countries |
|
Language | English |
Budget | $200–225 million |
Tenet is an upcoming 2020 spy film written and directed by Christopher Nolan, who produced it with Emma Thomas. A co-production between the United Kingdom and United States, it stars John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, Dimple Kapadia, Michael Caine, and Kenneth Branagh.
Nolan took more than five years to write the screenplay after deliberating about Tenet's central ideas for over a decade. Casting began in March 2019, and principal photography took place in Denmark, Estonia, India, Italy, Norway, the United Kingdom, and United States, starting in May 2019. Cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema shot on 70 mm and IMAX.
Delayed three times due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Tenet is scheduled to be released by Warner Bros. Pictures in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2020, and United States on September 3, 2020, in IMAX, 35 mm, and 70 mm. The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with some favorably comparing it to Nolan's Inception and praising the cast's performances, though some lamented the confusing plot.
Plot
The story begins with the Protagonist assisting a CIA operation to foil an opera siege in Kiev. During this operation the Protagonist is saved by a masked gunman who has a red string on his back. The operation is to retrieve some plutonium but this is found to be fake. The Protagonist is then abducted and threatened with torture to reveal information. However he is able to bite on an apparent suicide pill before he reveals any information. Upon waking, the Protagonist learns that this pill was just a test of his loyalty. He is then recruited into a secret organisation, given only the information that the word 'tenet' and a cross-fingered gesture will 'open many doors' for him. The Protagonist infiltrates a facility where he learns that in the future a technology has been developed that allows objects to have their entropy reversed and to move backwards through time. The protagonist is shown a bullet that returns to the gun it is fired from.
Tracking the metal from which the reversed bullets are made, the Protagonist infiltrates the compound of an Indian billionaire with the aid of Neil. He learns that it is in fact the billionaire's wife Priya who knows what is happening. Priya tells the Protagonist that the time-reversing technology is under the control of an arms dealer called Andrei Sator, who is in communication with an unknown agency in the future.
In order to get to Sator, the Protagonist approaches Sator's estranged wife Kat. Kat tells the Protagonist that Sator has her under control, due to a forged painting that she gave to Sator. The protagonist tries to win the trust of Kat by retrieving the painting from a storage facility within a 'freeport' in Oslo airport. This mission involves crashing a cargo plane into the building in order to start a fire and thereby trigger the fire suppressant system. During this operation, the Protagonist and Neil are attacked by two masked men, one of whom is using a time-reversed gun. This attacker is able to escape before the Protagonist is able to find out who he is.
The Protagonist returns to Kat, asking for her help to meet her husband Sator. Kat arranges for the Protagonist to come to a dinner party hosted by her husband. However, Sator does not trust the Protagonist. The Protagonist is able to bargain for his life by offering to steal weapons grade plutonium for Sator. The operation to steal the plutonium from an armored car is successful, but interrupted by a time-reversed vehicle. It is eventually revealed that Sator and his gang are operating a 'temporal pincer movement' in which they participate both forwards and backwards in time, by means of entering a 'temporal stile' following the operation and then moving backwards through time. At the temporal junction, Sator shoots Kat in the abdomen and leaves with her before the secret service arrives to secure the temporal stile. The Protagonist is then able to follow Sator back through the temporal stile, where he turns out to be the driver of the time-reversed car. The Protagonist is able to rescue Kat, but unable to prevent Sator from acquiring the plutonium.
It is revealed that Sator plans to use the plutonium to set off a device that will reverse entropy for the entire planet, killing everyone. Sator is dying from pancreatic cancer and if he is to die, he doesn't want anyone else to live either. Sator plans to return to a time in the past when he was happy with his wife and then set off the device, which is connected to a dead man's switch linked to his heartbeat. The Protagonist, Neil and Kat follow Sator backwards in time, travelling in a cargo ship container back to Oslo. They infiltrate the freeport art storage facility once again, where they enter another temporal stile that allows Kat to move forwards through time again and have her gunshot wound healed, and where it is also revealed that the Protagonist was in fact the masked assailant during their first operation in this location. Further back in the past, a military operation is then launched whereby The Protagonist and Neil attempt to retrieve the doomsday device from an abandoned Soviet era city, while Kat is with her husband on his yacht, aiming to prevent him from killing himself before the doomsday device is retrieved. Kat kills Sator, but The Protagonist and Neil are able to retrieve the doomsday device in time. During this operation, the Protagonist notices that Neil has a red string on his back and that he was therefore the masked man who saved him at the beginning of the film. The Protagonist then travels further back in time, helping to protect Kat from being killed by Priya, and revealing that he has been the leading the organisation for a further two years in the past.
Cast
- John David Washington as the Protagonist
- Robert Pattinson as Neil, the Protagonist's handler
- Elizabeth Debicki as Kat, Sator's estranged wife
- Dimple Kapadia as Priya
- Michael Caine
- Kenneth Branagh as Andrei Sator, a Russian oligarch who communes with the future
- Aaron Taylor-Johnson
- Clémence Poésy as Barbara, a scientist
- Himesh Patel
- Denzil Smith as an arms dealer and Priya's husband
- Martin Donovan
- Sean Avery
- Jack Cutmore-Scott
- Rich Ceraulo Ko
- Fiona Dourif
- Yuri Kolokolnikov
Production
Pre-production
Writer and director Christopher Nolan conceived the ideas behind Tenet over twenty years, but remarked "I've been working on this iteration of the script for about six or seven years". The title is a palindrome, reading the same backwards as forwards. Nolan made a conscious effort to abstain from any influence of the spy genre other than his own memory. Special effects supervisor Scott R. Fisher watched World War II movies and documentaries to find reference points for realism. Theoretical physicist Kip Thorne, who worked with Nolan on Interstellar (2014), was consulted on early questions to do with time and quantum physics.
Casting
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, and Elizabeth Debicki were cast in March 2019. Nolan chose Washington for his performance in BlacKkKlansman (2018). Washington, Pattinson, and Debicki said they were only permitted to read the screenplay while locked in a room. Pattinson based his character's mannerisms on those of author Christopher Hitchens. The casting of Dimple Kapadia, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Clémence Poésy, Michael Caine, and Kenneth Branagh was announced as filming started. Kapadia's screen test was put together by director Homi Adajania while working on his 2020 film Angrezi Medium. For one day of work, Caine was merely given his pages and had not heard from Nolan since. Himesh Patel joined in August, with Denzil Smith being added that September. Martin Donovan was revealed upon the release of the first trailer. In January 2020, retired ice hockey player Sean Avery made his involvement known. Jack Cutmore-Scott, Rich Ceraulo Ko, Fiona Dourif, and Yuri Kolokolnikov were included in the following months.
Filming
Principal photography, involving a crew of 250 people, began in May 2019 and took place in seven countries — Denmark, Estonia, India, Italy, Norway, the United Kingdom, and United States. Filming in Estonia happened in June and July, with the Linnahall, Pärnu Highway, and adjacent streets closed to facilitate it. Kumu Art Museum doubled as the fictional "Oslo freeport". Tallinn mayor Mihhail Kõlvart expressed concerns about potential disruptions as the original shooting schedule required that the arterial Laagna Road be closed for one month. Production eventually reached a compromise involving temporary road closures and detours. Scenes were shot in Ravello, Italy and Hampstead, England at Cannon Hall late August, and on the roof of the Oslo Opera House and at The Thief hotel in Tjuvholmen, Norway, and in Rødbyhavn, Denmark at Nysted Wind Farm early September. A five-day shoot occurred later that month in Mumbai, where Nolan had traveled in February and April for location scouting. He decided on Breach Candy Hospital, Cafe Mondegar, Colaba Causeway, Colaba Market, Gateway of India, Grant Road, Royal Bombay Yacht Club, and the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel. A restaurant set named "Chaand" was built near the hotel, but never used, serving only as an alternative. Forty boats were positioned at the Gateway of India, where the crew also rescued a man who had attempted suicide. A stunt where someone jumps off a building was done in Grant Road, and a helicopter was applied for aerial footage of the hospital. They proceeded to Victorville, California soon after, disguising it as Oslo, and worked with more than ninety extras. Instead of using miniatures and visual effects (VFX) for a plane crash sequence, Nolan determined that purchasing a Boeing 747 proved more cost effective. October saw them in a desert outside Palm Springs, where an abandoned city had been constructed and hundreds were clothed in military camouflage uniforms. Director of photography Hoyte van Hoytema used a combination of 70 mm film and IMAX. He prioritized Panavision lenses that would best accommodate lower light. Segments that concerned "time inversion" were captured both in backward and forward mobility.
Post-production
Ludwig Göransson composed the score as Nolan's frequent collaborator Hans Zimmer had committed himself to the 2020 film Dune. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Göransson recorded musicians at their homes. The soundtrack contains "The Plan", a song by Travis Scott. Jennifer Lame replaced Nolan's long-time editor Lee Smith, who was occupied with 2019's 1917. DNEG created about 280 VFX shots.
Release and marketing
Distributor Warner Bros. Pictures originally scheduled Tenet for a July 17, 2020 release in IMAX, 35 mm, and 70 mm film. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was first delayed to July 31, and subsequently August 12. Executives calculated that each postponement cost Warner Bros. between $200,000 and $400,000 in marketing fees. After being held up indefinitely, Warner Bros. arranged the film to be released internationally on August 26 in seventy countries, including Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Russia, and the United Kingdom. Preview screenings commenced in Australia on August 22 and 23, leading into a wider launch on August 27. It will then move to select cities in the United States on September 3, gradually expanding in the ensuing weeks. On September 4, it will come out in China.
In August 2019, Warner Bros. debuted a forty-second teaser ahead of Hobbs & Shaw previews. It was attached to Indian showings of Joker in October. The first trailer was published online in December, when a cinema-exclusive prologue played in certain IMAX theaters before Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. The latter was introduced during Indian IMAX screenings of Birds of Prey in February 2020. A TV spot appeared that May, promoted in Fortnite's Party Royale mode. The film's inverted logo, stylized by Nolan as TENƎꓕ, had been altered around this time because it came to light that a bicycle brand bore the same design. The final trailer, out in August, featured "The Plan".
With a production budget between $200–225 million, Tenet is Nolan's most expensive original project. IndieWire speculated that the marketing could push the final sum to $300–350 million, though analysts predicted lower advertising costs than usual, owing to inexpensive live sports ads. Observer estimated the film would need to make $450–500 million in order to break even. Nolan is reported to receive twenty percent of the first-dollar gross.
Prior to the premiere, conjecture emerged that Tenet was a sequel to Inception (2010). Washington commented on the theory: "I'd say is an in-law to Inception ... They're related by marriage".
Reception
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Tenet holds an approval rating of 80% based on 45 reviews, with an average rating of 7.09/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "A visually dazzling puzzle for film lovers to unlock, Tenet serves up all the cerebral spectacle audiences expect from a Christopher Nolan production." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 71 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Guy Lodge of Variety described Tenet as a "grandly entertaining, time-slipping spectacle". Robbie Collin of The Telegraph likened it to Nolan's Inception and praised the "depth, subtlety and wit of Pattinson and Debicki's performances". Leslie Felperin of The Hollywood Reporter felt Washington was "dashing but a little dull", but remarked that Debicki's performance "adds a color to Nolan's palette, and has persuasive chemistry with Branagh in their joint portrait of a violent, dysfunctional love-hate relationship." She further concluded that Tenet makes "for a chilly, cerebral film — easy to admire, especially since it's so rich in audacity and originality, but almost impossible to love, lacking as it is in a certain humanity." Mike McCahill of Indiewire noted that it was "the summer's most keenly awaited event movie" but called it "a humorless disappointment."
Notes
- Seven weeks of filming in Estonia came at a cost of €16.5 million; Warner Bros. Pictures paid a rebate that was reimbursed at thirty percent.
- It took one week to secure the permission to shoot in Mumbai. The planned schedule was completed in half the time.
- Tenet went under the working title Merry Go Round.
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External links
Christopher Nolan | |||||
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Films directed |
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Film produced | Man of Steel (2013, also сo-story writer) | ||||
Related |
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Category |
- 2020 films
- 2020s action films
- 2020s science fiction action films
- 2020s science fiction films
- 2020s spy films
- American action films
- American films
- American science fiction action films
- American science fiction films
- American spy films
- British action films
- British films
- British science fiction action films
- British science fiction films
- British spy films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Christopher Nolan
- Films postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
- Films produced by Christopher Nolan
- Films produced by Emma Thomas
- Films scored by Ludwig Göransson
- Films shot in Denmark
- Films shot in Estonia
- Films shot in Mumbai
- Films shot in Norway
- Films shot in the United Kingdom
- Films shot in the United States
- Films with screenplays by Christopher Nolan
- Foreign films shot in India
- Upcoming IMAX films
- Warner Bros. films