Scottish Daily Mail

Blockbuste­rs are back... with a blast to make Bond blush!

Branagh’s the baddie. The Night Manager’s girl is the leading lady and the director brought you Dunkirk

- Kate Muir

Christophe­r Nolan’s spy thriller tenet is a mind-boggling and timebendin­g spectacle: A hugely anticipate­d blockbuste­r which should end months of darkness in cinemas.

Audiences will be high on the sheer energy of the no-expensessp­ared action: A bullet-pumping bunker bust, a crash staged using a real Boeing 747 (well, that’s one way of getting rid of those retired jumbo jets), and astonishin­g car chases that enter another dimension.

the film stars John David Washington as an American secret agent known only as the protagonis­t and robert pattinson as his deceptivel­y languid British counterpar­t Neil.

they try to foil Andrei, a psychotic ex-soviet arms dealer (Kenneth Branagh with a hokey accent), who has dastardly plans.

so far, so Bond. But Nolan takes the spy game to chess grandmaste­r level, as time inverts in a parallel universe. the British director of Dunkirk has played similar tricks in other films like interstell­ar, inception and Memento, but there is almost a childish pleasure to be had here in seeing events reel surprising­ly backwards. even the film’s title is a palindrome.

Washington (who starred in BlacKkKlan­sman) is a smart, muscular hero, as comfortabl­e killing in sWAt team gear as he is in a savile row suit, walking out of carnage and casually fastening just the top button of his single-breasted jacket, as a gentleman should.

pattinson leaves twilight firmly behind as a too-cool-for-public-school chap with a steely interior. oddly, the spies’ code phrase is ‘We live in a twilight world,’ which may be an in-joke.

the significan­ce of bespoke tailoring in this movie is made clear when Michael Caine – who featured in Nolan’s Dark Knight Batman trilogy – turns up for five minutes to give the protagonis­t espionage advice over steak and chips in a private gentleman’s club in London.

He explains to him that his American Brooks Brothers suit won’t cut it in english society, and offers to recommend a tailor. ‘You British don’t have a monopoly on snobbery,’ says the protagonis­t. ‘No, but we have a controllin­g interest,’ says Caine’s character, delivering the sartorial death blow. talking of tailoring, the film’s best clotheshor­se is elizabeth Debicki, who plays Andrei’s wife Kat, and gets to show off some achingly perfect couture while working in a posh english auction house. (No wonder Debicki – who also starred in BBC’s the Night Manager) has been picked to play princess Diana in the Crown.) At 6ft 2in, Kat is an english rose gone rampant, trapped in a marriage which takes coercive control to new heights of nastiness.

Nolan sometimes neglects the emotional heart of his films in his desire for breathtaki­ng cinematogr­aphy and grandiose action.

in tenet, he attempts to create a poignant core with Kat and her young son, who is used as a pawn in Andrei’s games.

But there’s something faintly unbelievab­le about the relationsh­ip. Debicki’s character seems too intelligen­t for victimhood. Besides, there is barely time to catch your breath, let alone invest in a relationsh­ip, as tenet bounces round the world from india to estonia, Norway to London, with a stop-off on a superyacht moored off italy.

For those of us fresh out of lockdown, and subject to new travel sanctions imposed every week, it’s thrilling stuff. even watching the opening scene, a cello-smashing showdown at the Kiev opera, had me thinking not ‘oh my goodness! terrorists with bombs!!’ but ‘Wow! thousands of people in a room… without masks!!’ in fact, the film takes on unintentio­nal resonances in the days of Covid-19. ‘As i understand it, we’re trying to prevent World War iii,’ says a scientist to the protagonis­t. ‘Nuclear holocaust?’ he asks. ‘No, something else…’ she answers. At that point, i wanted to shout out: ‘Global pandemic!’ You’ll have to wear a face mask for two-and-a-half hours, in a popcorn-free auditorium – but tenet is worth the discomfort. the film is the clever, exhilarati­ng comeback that cinemas – and audiences – have been waiting for.

Tenet is released on Wednesday.

 ??  ?? Secret service: John David Washington as the film’s hero, known only as The Protagonis­t
Secret service: John David Washington as the film’s hero, known only as The Protagonis­t
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