The Hindu - International

A layered traditiona­list

The winner of the Best Director at Academy Awards wants to give his audience the same feel and quality of the traditiona­l cinema that he experience­d while growing up

- Vighnesh P. Venkitesh Christophe­r Nolan

In an interview, aired weeks before he went on the stage at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood to receive his first Academy Award, British filmmaker Christophe­r Nolan recalled the first movie he remembered seeing at a cinema: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Nolan said how he, as a young boy, hid behind the seats, frightened of the evil queen turning into a witch.

That young boy’s fear turned to fascinatio­n as he tumbled deep into the visual blackhole of movies — much like the protagonis­t in his Interstell­ar — through Star Wars, James Bond movies, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Blade Runner. While Nolan acknowledg­es the influence George Lucas, Stanley Kubrick and Ridley Scott had on his film making, his key to success lies with that frightened boy who realised the hold a movie can have on the audience and the emotions it can relay onto them.

Over his career, which stretches from the 1990 shortfilm Tarantella to the 2023 magnum opus Oppenheime­r, Nolan had managed to cultivate multiple impression­s on his audience. Some see a riddler in him, challengin­g the audience to figure out his works. Some see an innovative­ly classic filmmaker, who manages to infuse elements for commercial success into art house movies. Some others see a dedicated traditiona­list prepared to go to any extent to avoid artificiality in his frames.

For others, he is an arrogant elitist, who splurges unnecessar­y budget while looking down on those without the luxury. However may he come across to his audience, Nolan finds motivation for his works in a simple line: “Love the thing you are doing” — and there is no question over his love for visual storytelli­ng.

While he was fascinated by Hollywood blockbuste­rs as a child, Nolan began to go ‘back in time’, to the world of silent movies, from the likes of German auteur Fritz Lang. These movies had to rely on visuals and partly background scores to connect with the audience without dialogues. The silent movies taught Nolan the scopes of visual storytelli­ng. The tendency to lean into visuals and the multilayer­ed narration is what got him the tag of being difficult to discern. Nolan defends his layered approach by drawing parallels to the era he grew up in, where one will never get exposed to the same movie twice unless they choose to go back to the cinema for it. Nolan believes a good movie must compel the viewer to go back to it and he wishes to reward the returning viewer with something new every time.

Insistence for film

But it is not this layered approach that keeps Nolan aside from his contempora­ries. It is his compulsion to shoot on film. Nolan sees an “economic imperative to push technologi­es” in newer and cheaper digital alternativ­es to films and is not ready to compromise the higher quality of images achievable by films. He claims to be able to differentiate between movies shot in films and digitally in a second. For the director who grew up being impressed by the “beauty and magnitude of images” in the Leicester Square, London, going digital was “watering down the film experience”. His want to give his audience the same feel he experience­d growing up might be what drove him to stick with film.

He is also against computerge­nerated imagery, the green screens and motion sensors, which he feels alienate his actors from the story. Gary Oldman, who played commission­er Gordon in Nolan’s version of comic superhero Batman, remembers the director giving him specific instructio­ns only twice throughout the trilogy. And one of them was, “there is more at stake”, to which Oldman needed no further clarification. Nolan feels such a process will not be possible if the actors are asked to perform with just green screens around them and are not grounded in the story.

Nolan says the rise of online streaming and digital tools will not affect the “communal experience” of traditiona­l cinema. He grew up hearing “movies are dead”, a statement going around since the popularisa­tion of TV in the 1950s. But, the Oscar winning director says, there is a need to preserve the tradition as “the history of cinema is the history of people looking after movies”.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: R. RAJESH ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: R. RAJESH

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India