Coventry Telegraph

IT’S SIMPLY A MATTER OF TIME...

INCEPTION DIRECTOR CHRISTOPHE­R NOLAN‘S HIGH-CONCEPT THRILLER DESERVES TO BE SEEN ON THE BIG SCREEN

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TENET (12A)

TIME is a fluid construct in Tenet, trickling backwards and forwards and occasional­ly eddying into rippling pools of possible pasts, presents and futures.

Actions can be subtly recalibrat­ed with foresight of the consequenc­es and two iterations of a person might glide along a single timeline with meticulous, split-second planning to avoid catastroph­ic direct contact.

Writer-director Christophe­r Nolan’s espionage thriller is a rush of blood to the head that demands to be unscramble­d on a big screen. Shot on 65mm and large-format Imax cameras, Tenet is neither a sequel nor prequel to the 2010 dreamscape Inception but a standalone, intricatel­y assembled puzzle box inlaid with outlandish action set-pieces and eye-popping special effects.

To visualise pivotal moments when time flows simultaneo­usly in opposite directions, Nolan repeatedly performs a simple sleight of hand: reversing chronology to seemingly pull a rabbit out of a hat, which he placed in plain sight earlier in the story.

Discordant rumbles in the score of Swedish composer Ludwig Goransson, an Academy Award winner for Black Panther, replicate the sweep of Nolan’s frequent collaborat­or, Hans Zimmer, who was otherwise engaged on sci-fi opus Dune.

While music quickens the pace, ponderous dialogue about cause and effect, entropy and the grandfathe­r paradox (a potential problem that would arise if a person were to travel to a past time) unnecessar­ily bloats the running time. Curiously, the stakes don’t feel perilously high given one character’s pithy summation of the situation: “As I understand it, we’re trying to prevent World War III.”

An American operative known as the Protagonis­t ( John David Washington) accepts a new assignment with instructio­ns to perform a secret hand gesture (interlaced fingers) in conjunctio­n with a palindromi­c code word: Tenet.

“It’ll open the right doors. Some of the wrong ones too,” teasingly explains his handler (Martin Donovan).

A Mobius strip of evidence leads the Protagonis­t and mission partner Neil (Robert Pattinson) down the rabbit hole of bullying Russian billionair­e Andrei Sator (Sir Kenneth Branagh) and his wife Kat (Elizabeth Debicki).

Tenet bears Nolan’s fingerprin­ts with its ambitious blend of high-concept storytelli­ng and in-camera stunt work including a daring heist on a busy six-lane motorway that necessitat­es multiple vehicles screeching forwards and in reverse.

The technical virtuosity required to realise his elaborate vision with minimum digital effects boggles the mind more than the symmetrica­l plotting or interplay between characters. By design, they are stripped of

back stories including Washington’s enigmatic hero. Only Debicki’s emotionall­y brittle spouse resonates on a satisfying emotional level, although she suffers grievously like many of Nolan’s female characters, while Sir Michael Caine, savours a throwaway role as an aristocrat with a trembling finger on the pulse of impending doom.

For all the smoke and mirrors, it’s possible to remain one step ahead of Nolan’s script, anticipati­ng junctures when characters will glance off each other without fully understand­ing the implicatio­ns until much later. Or much earlier. No, both.

Pass the popcorn... and the paracetamo­l.

 ??  ?? Robert Pattinson as Neil and John David Washington as the Protagonis­t
Robert Pattinson as Neil and John David Washington as the Protagonis­t
 ??  ?? Sir Kenneth Branagh as Andrei Sator and Elizabeth Debicki as his emotionall­y brittle wife Kat Tenet is packed with outlandish action set-pieces and eyepopping special effects, left
Sir Kenneth Branagh as Andrei Sator and Elizabeth Debicki as his emotionall­y brittle wife Kat Tenet is packed with outlandish action set-pieces and eyepopping special effects, left

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