Los Angeles Times

Inside ‘ Tenet’ car chase

Christophe­r Nolan details what drives the radical sequence back and forth in time.

- By Emily Zemler

The spectacle of “Tenet” may have been intended for the big screen, but writer- director Christophe­r Nolan is aware that there is still excitement to be had with home viewing. After a muchdiscus­sed ( and COVID- 19delayed) global theatrical release earlier this year, Nolan’s time- bending spy film has now arrived on Bluray, DVD and VOD, with much of the explosive action intended to be just as mindblowin­g in your living room.

“Home viewing has always been an enormously important part of the cycle of any f ilm,” Nolan says. “I was born in 1970, home video came along when I was about 11 years old, and ever since it’s been the economic engine of the movie business.”

Despite recent comments decrying Warner Bros.’ announceme­nt to send its entire 2021 release slate to HBO Max the same day the f ilms hit theaters in the U. S., Nolan has his own preference for how his projects are released to viewers at home.

In an interview conducted before his criticism went public, Nolan noted, “Over the years I’ve partnered with the studios — in particular Warner Bros. — in putting enormous care and attention into how we translate the big screen experience into the different formats we’re releasing it on. ... It’s something very close to my heart.”

The director, who believes audiences will go back

to theaters as the pandemic subsides, also understand­s that the theatrical release of “Tenet” came at a time when many people were nervous — or simply unable — to venture out to cinemas. Although the movie played drive- in engagement­s in the Los Angeles area, indoor theaters in the county have been closed since March.

“I live in Los Angeles and to not be able to release a film in your own hometown is very frustratin­g,” Nolan says. “It’s really cool that now people are going to get to see it.”

Nolan scripted the film — which stars John David Washington as a new recruit in a mysterious organizati­on called Tenet, tasked with saving the world from a future threat — as his take on the espionage genre. It’s a hypedup version of James Bond adventures, with massive setpieces, exotic locations and the inclusion of a sci- fi element where the entropy of objects can be literally inverted. While one of the most memorable moments for Nolan involved crashing an actual 747 into a building, the most exciting sequence is a lengthy car chase that sees its vehicles moving both forward and backward in time.

“[ T] he reason for the science fiction element is that I wanted to give the audience a fresh experience of a car chase,” Nolan said. “I wanted to give viewers a narrative reason for looking at a car chase in a different way. With this idea of inversion, the palindromi­c idea of things moving forwards and backwards at the same time, I felt that if we did our jobs right we could build on what we learned from decades of doing car chases. We wanted to really take it to another level.”

Nolan spent a long time working out the logistics of the chase, which plays out forward and then again in reverse as Washington’s character, dubbed the Protagonis­t, becomes inverted. Wanting to ensure that nothing in the sequence felt predictabl­e, Nolan tasked his team, including stunt coordinato­r George Cottle, special effects supervisor Scott Fisher and cinematogr­apher Hoyte van Hoytema, with coming up with ways to keep viewers on their toes.

Movie magic

“Putting a complicate­d sequence like this in front of the audience is a bit like doing a series of magic tricks,” Nolan explained. “And if you repeat a trick too many times the eye picks it up and starts to see it and your suspension of disbelief goes out the window. I wanted to ... vary the technique from shot to shot to shot so that you’re always staying a little bit ahead of the audience. Just as the audience’s eye, which is a ruthless eye, starts to pick up on the technique, you change gears.”

“When [ Nolan] comes up with an idea, you can guarantee he has thought every aspect of that idea to the furthest he can physically take it in his mind,” Cottle noted. “I remember him telling me that he was home with his kids and they came into his office at 9 a. m. and he was playing with two toy cars, one facing forwards and one facing backwards. They left, came back four hours later and he was still staring at the two cars. He really has such an incredible understand­ing of what he wants to see and what he wants to achieve.”

Cottle, who collaborat­ed with the filmmaker on his Batman trilogy and “Inception,” brought in 55 stunt drivers, including 20 from Los Angeles who had previously worked with Nolan. Fisher and his team rebuilt a fleet of cars and vehicles to be driven backward or forward, ultimately getting the backward- driving cars to up to 60 miles an hour without switching around the car’s chassis. In some shots, all of the background cars were driving in reverse while the hero car moved forward.

“We always stayed true to the geometry of the car,” said Cottle. “Even when they were going backwards, the steering wheel was at the back end of the car, which is like driving a forklift at 50 miles per hour. It makes it very unstable. But it makes the car act and perform in ways you just can’t replicate with any other made rig. It was a big task to not alter the cars too much, but I think it really showed.”

“They would thrash these cars around,” Nolan added. “Run it forward, run it backward, trying to see how fast it would go. Rerigging the cars so they were geared forwards to backwards reversed so they could drive very quickly in reverse and see what that did to the handling. They evolved a series of techniques over time of how we would do each individual shot.”

To film the sequence, production shut down six kilometers of the Laagna Tee highway in Tallinn, Estonia, a massive road Cottle compared to the 405 Freeway in L. A., and shot the chase for 12 hours a day, every day. The initial part of the chase — where Washington’s Protagonis­t and his partner, Neil, played by Robert Pattinson, heist an object from a moving truck — was rehearsed and

filmed as a complete sequence. Pattinson did some of the driving himself and the team modified an existing fire truck so Washington could jump onboard from the BMW and swing across the ladder for the heist.

Nolan and Van Hoytema typically led the shoot from a high- speed SUV dubbed “the Edge,” which had the camera running from a rig on the roof. But Nolan also found himself crouched in the back of the hero cars hidden behind the actors and, at one point, he was harnessed to

the back of a pickup truck to throw a key prop to Washington. The biggest challenge was not the stunts or the driving itself but actually keeping track of which car needed to go in which direction and whether the camera needed to be running forward or backward. The team relied on a precise previsuali­zation of sequence to ensure each shot was right.

“The biggest challenge overall was getting there every day and trying to determine which technique to use for which shot,” Nolan said.

“For obvious financial reasons we couldn’t just buy six versions of every car. The cars had to be reconfigur­ed [ for each shot] and that would take time, so it was incumbent on me, in coordinati­on with George and Hoyte, to be able to tell the grip crew and the special effects crew which car we were going to use two hours down the line. We’d send off the BMW and it would have a driver installed in the back while we shot something else and so forth.

“Given the complicate­d nature of the sequence, that was quite hard to do. And when you made the call you didn’t want the wrong vehicle coming back because we thought we were going to run it forwards but actually we need to run it backwards. That was hours wasted. No one was really able to intuit these reverse scenarios. Once you made a mistake it had a lot of implicatio­ns further down the line with scheduling. We spent a lot of time discussing it and analyzing it and thinking it.”

Scientific method

While “Tenet,” like “Inception,” is based on a what- if scenario, Nolan did consult with theoretica­l physicist Kip Thorne, with whom he’d worked on “Interstell­ar.” But “Tenet” takes some scientific liberties. Nolan and visual effects supervisor Andrew Jackson spent months discussing how to best portray the physics in the inverted world, particular­ly how the wheels of a car would spin in the dust and what an explosion would look like in reverse.

“The ‘ If this were possible’ is a big get- out- of- jail- free card,” Nolan said. “I worked with Kip on ‘ Interstell­ar’ ... and he wanted to do a film where the science was real and unassailab­le. ... The basic science behind it is pretty sound.”

Nolan and Cottle felt the car chase — and “Tenet” — break new ground, technicall­y and narrativel­y, which many viewers will now experience for the first time.

“We were able to do more in the film than I ever thought possible, actually,” Nolan said. “When I wrote this one, particular­ly in terms of the action, I really went for it. I kind of overwrote it and I think in the back of my mind there was a list of things, like crashing a 747 into a building, where I was waiting for a tap on the shoulder from someone saying, ‘ Look, this really isn’t possible.’ But the people I work with found a way to do all these things, so I think it’s exceeded my expectatio­ns in terms of what we could get onscreen.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Melinda Sue Gordon A TRICKED- OUT Warner Bros. ?? camera car was used to f ilm cars traveling forward and backward in time in ‘ Tenet.”
Photog r aphs by Melinda Sue Gordon A TRICKED- OUT Warner Bros. camera car was used to f ilm cars traveling forward and backward in time in ‘ Tenet.”
 ??  ?? CHRISTOPHE­R NOLAN, right, uses toy cars to block out the car chase with crew members on set.
CHRISTOPHE­R NOLAN, right, uses toy cars to block out the car chase with crew members on set.
 ??  ?? KENNETH BRANAGH walks away as a car explodes behind him in Christophe­r Nolan’s “Tenet.”
KENNETH BRANAGH walks away as a car explodes behind him in Christophe­r Nolan’s “Tenet.”

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