The Guardian (USA)

Warner Bros delays release of Christophe­r Nolan's Tenet again

- Andrew Pulver

Christophe­r Nolan’s new film Tenet, hailed for weeks as a key release to revive cinemagoin­g after the coronaviru­s shutdown, has been delayed yet again due to uncertaint­y over cinemas reopening in the US.

Deadline reports that Tenet’s backers Warner Bros have taken the film off their release calendar, with no confirmed date, though studio chair Toby Emmerich says a date will be announced “imminently”. Tenet, a big budget science fiction thriller starring John David Washington, has already been shifted several times: originally due to open on 17 July in the US, it was moved to 31 July and then 12 August.

Nolan has long been a champion of the cinema experience, and is understood to be keen to ensure Tenet does not break the release window by going to streaming or video on demand. He was also recently reported to have turned down a proposal that Tenet be released outside the US first, in territorie­s where cinemas have already reopened, in order to support US cinemas.

However, Emmerich’s statement implied that the position on an earlier internatio­nal release may be changing; he said in his statement that “[Warner Bros is] not treating Tenet like a traditiona­l global day-and-date release, and our upcoming marketing and distributi­on plans will reflect that”.

Tenet’s $200m-plus budget would normally call for a swift global rollout in every territory, combining event-scale marketing and an attempt to restrict piracy.

The change in direction follows increasing complaints by non-US distributo­rs and cinema operators that their industries will be crippled by Hollywood’s focus on North American cinemas as reopening plans in the US have been upended by the chaotic response to the pandemic. An unnamed UK executive told Variety that, given that Hollywood blockbuste­rs can earn up to 70% of their takings outside the US, “it feels like that’s been forgotten”. Tim Richards, CEO of multiplex chain Vue Internatio­nal, said: “We can’t thrive again as an industry without a concerted effort on the major releases.” Jocelyn Bouyssy, managing director of CGR Cinemas, France’s second biggest multiplex chain, said: “It will be a catastroph­e if Mulan and Tenet are further delayed … We don’t know how long we can hold up like this.”

 ??  ?? ‘We can’t thrive again as an industry without a concerted effort on the major releases’: John David Washington in Tenet. Photograph: Melinda Sue Gordon/Warner Bros/AP
‘We can’t thrive again as an industry without a concerted effort on the major releases’: John David Washington in Tenet. Photograph: Melinda Sue Gordon/Warner Bros/AP

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