USA TODAY US Edition

Christophe­r Nolan’s ‘Tenet’ is cool but too complicate­d

His thriller is an ambitious, time-bending caper in the spirit of James Bond. Review,

- Brian Truitt

Remember the Rubik’s Cube in the 1980s? That puzzling toy was challengin­g enough. Then came Rubik’s Snake, then Rubik’s Magic, and meanwhile it’s like, “Whoa, I’m still trying to solve the cube thing!”

This is the experience of watching writer/director Christophe­r Nolan’s sci-fi action thriller “Tenet” (★★g☆; rated PG-13; nationwide Thursday where theaters are open), the latest from the auteur of the brilliant “Inception” that’s both dazzling and increasing­ly bewilderin­g.

Since we are in a pandemic and this is the biggest movie to date since our big-screen entertainm­ent went kablooey, consider seeing it at a drive-in and take safety precaution­s at indoor theaters. If you’re not feeling up to it yet, that’s OK, too – you have plenty of time to do a ton of physics homework that might help navigate what is essentiall­y a very complicate­d James Bond movie.

The globetrott­ing spy film covers some familiar bases – albeit with Nolan’s signature epic vision – starting with the far-flung locales, from the coast of Vietnam to an abandoned Russian town to an opera house in Kiev, where “Tenet” opens with a white-knuckle mission and a test for The Protagonis­t (a sensationa­l John David Washington). A new recruit to a super-duper secret organizati­on, our hero goes

unnamed because he is the audience’s point of view as we all get a crash course on time inversion. (It’s not time “travel” per se in Nolan’s cinematic science, it’s more about the connection between how some things move forward and others – thanks, entropy! – move backward.)

There’s a megalomani­acal Russian oligarch, Andrei Sator (Kenneth

Branagh), who’s got machinatio­ns leading to the proverbial end of the world (but existentia­lly way worse). To stop him, The Protagonis­t worms his way into the supervilla­in’s circle by getting to know the bad guy’s abused wife, Kat (Elizabeth Debicki). And The Protagonis­t gets help learning the ins and outs of inversion from his mysterious new partner, Neil (Robert Pattinson).

No one does a wowing action extravagan­za like Nolan, and he manages to up his game yet again. There’s a hallway brawl featuring foes moving in and out of time that’s just as insanely enjoyable as his “Inception” fight sequences, cars race and flip forward and backward in an extended chase, and a 747 is purposeful­ly crashed into a building to steal a painting. Overkill? Nah, sublime.

When these eye-popping moments happen, however, you might be too busy trying to put the more confusing aspects of “Tenet” together to enjoy them fully. The mystifying stuff does tend to pile up. “Don’t try to understand it. Just feel it,” one character advises, which is easier said than done because part of what makes Nolan’s movies so enjoyable is there’s always something neat to chew on. However, with no tasty nougat, you’re chewing just to chew, and there’s not enough underlying story or explanator­y exposition to fully satisfy.

The most exciting gift we do get is Washington in all his charismati­c cool, continuing to impress and build on his strong work in Spike Lee’s “BlacKkKlan­sman.” The Protagonis­t might be the closest we’ll ever get to an American 007: A sneering Sator asks him if he has slept with his wife, and Washington’s unfazed operative simply says: “No. Well, not yet.” It’s also fun to see him working beside Pattinson, who exudes a more Bondian suaveness. Sometimes one’s the sidekick, sometimes it’s the other, though they fit together naturally no matter what’s going on in the usually explosive proceeding­s.

With its innovative splendor and ambition, “Tenet” aims for mindblowin­g. What results instead, however, is a little brain-breaking and quite head-scratching.

 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON ?? A Russian oligarch (Kenneth Branagh) uses his wife (Elizabeth Debicki) as a means to an apocalypti­c end in the time-twisting spy thriller “Tenet.”
MELINDA SUE GORDON A Russian oligarch (Kenneth Branagh) uses his wife (Elizabeth Debicki) as a means to an apocalypti­c end in the time-twisting spy thriller “Tenet.”
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? John David Washington, left, and Robert Pattinson are secret agents in Christophe­r Nolan’s sci-fi action movie “Tenet.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES John David Washington, left, and Robert Pattinson are secret agents in Christophe­r Nolan’s sci-fi action movie “Tenet.”
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