THE ODYSSEY:
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN CRAFTS A TRULY MONUMENTAL EPIC!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: **** out of 4
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
Odysseus facing off against an army of giant soldiers in The Odyssey
Director Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight trilogy, Inception, Oppenheimer) brings Homer’s epic poem to life like never before in his latest film, The Odyssey. It’s pretty obvious this was going to be one of my most anticipated movies of the year; I love Christopher Nolan and think he’s a wonderful filmmaker who always pushes the envelope of what he’s able to capture with a camera while also delivering some truly gripping and epically powerful stories.
The Dark Knight, the second of his Batman films, remains one of my all-time favorite theater experiences I’ve ever had, and his last movie, Oppenheimer, was a haunting and exhilarating cautionary tale about creating destruction and the guilt that comes with it; the latter even won the Best Picture Oscar. So, yeah, The Odyssey has a lot to live up to after the cultural impact that Oppenheimer had. Was Nolan able to capture lightning in a bottle twice? The answer is yes!
While it’s hard to say it’s on par with The Dark Knight or Oppenheimer, The Odyssey is a damn impressive movie from both a filmmaking and storytelling perspective, and just like most of his films, it demands to be seen in IMAX. The giant screen and crystal clear sound make a huge difference with this film even if you don’t see it in 70mm.
The film is set in Ancient Greece and chronicles the long and perilous journey home of Odysseus (Matt Damon-Bourne franchise, The Departed, The Martian) after the Trojan War. Meanwhile his wife and queen of Ithaca, Penelope (Anne Hathaway-The Devil Wears Prada 1 and 2, Rachel Getting Married, Les Miserables; who had previously worked with Nolan on The Dark Knight Rises and Interstellar) is having a conflict with suitors in her husband’s absence while his son, Telemachus (Tom Holland-Marvel Cinematic Universe, The Lost City of Z, Uncharted) sets off on his own voyage to find his father and figure out who he is.
The film also stars Robert Pattinson (The Twilight Saga, The Batman, The Drama; who had previously worked with Nolan on Tenet) as Antinous, Lupita Nyong’o (12 Years a Slave, Black Panther 1 and 2, Us) in a dual role as Helen of Troy and Clytemnestra, Samantha Morton (Sweet and Lowdown, In America, The Whale) as Circe, John Leguizamo (Regarding Henry, John Wick 1 and 2, The Menu) as Eumaeus, Zendaya (Spider-Man franchise, Dunetrilogy, The Drama) as Athena, and Charlize Theron (Monster, Young Adult, Mad Max: Fury Road) as Calypso.
Overall, The Odyssey is pure Christopher Nolan filmmaking at its most epic and a riveting cinematic spectacle. This is a 2-hour and 53-minute movie (Just a little shorter than Oppenheimer), and it doesn’t feel its length even when it slows down to do character development and explore mythological and psychological ideas; it’s never dull.
I was locked in, blown away by what Nolan shot on camera, and captivated by the characters and their adventures throughout this near 3-hour epic. The big selling point is the fact that this is Christopher Nolan retelling The Odyssey, and he makes the best damn retelling of The Odyssey he can, and he f*cking succeeded.
The movie looks fantastic, with the majority of it filmed practically and captures the size and scope of Homer’s Odyssey that’s in equal parts mythical and real. It is a fantasy movie, but through Nolan’s filmmaking, it feels like a real environment that you could reach into the screen and interact with- no green screen, CGI, or digital bullshit, just Nolan and his crew pouring their blood, sweat, and tears into every epic shot of the film (Did I mention, see this in IMAX?).
Given the massive cast attached to this film, of course, the acting is going to be excellent, with Matt Damon giving a superb and surprising performance as Odysseus. Damon is probably the last person I’d expect to play Odysseus, but he nailed it perfectly and carried a ton of emotional weight to the film.
Tom Holland is also great as Odysseus’ son, Anne Hathaway is incredible as the queen trying to deal with all these suitors, and Robert Pattinson is wonderful as this suitor you just want to punch in the face every time he’s onscreen, and no, it’s not because Pattinson was in Twilight. However, the performance that truly shocked me was John Leguizamo as Eumaeus; he is magnificent in this. I thought he would have been overshadowed by Damon, Holland, Hathaway, etc. and given a very minor role, but he is prominent when the film needs him, and he gives some of the best acting I’ve ever seen from him. Leguizamo has really come a long way since Luigi Mario from the Super Mario Bros. movie.
The movie isn’t super gory or anything, though there are some bloody images during the battles, but the film has some surprisingly terrifying moments like the sequence where Odysseus and his men encounter a giant cyclops that starts eating people, smashing them, and ripping them apart; that’s pretty brutal and frightening. Probably the most unsettling scene in the film to me was the whole bit involving Odysseus’ men meeting Circe that makes the pig transformation from Spirited Away look like Winnie the Pooh.
Christopher Nolan knocked it out of the park once again. The Odyssey is a monumental and epically powerful movie that deserves to be seen and experienced on IMAX or whatever the largest theater screen you have. Go out and see this film and let Hollywood know you want to see more movies like this, Project Hail Mary, and most likely Dune: Part Three, and less recycled and manufactured bullshit.







