The Herald (South Africa)

Time-bending action masterpiec­e worth rewatching

- Robbie Collin

I’m not saying that Christophe­r Nolan’s mind does actually operate outside the bounds of the space-time continuum.

But if it did, would you be all that surprised?

Nolan’s films tend to be years in the devising and crafting, but they’ve lately been arriving at eerily apposite moments.

Dunkirk pre-empted the great re-examinatio­n of the British national character that blew in with Brexit, while The Dark Knight Rises, the last part of his Batman trilogy, turned a cartoonish comic-book villain into a populist demagoPgRu­e in 2012, four years ahead of the curve.

Now, as the planet attempts to lurch out of lockdown, we have Tenet — a film set at what feels like the entropic endpoint of human progress, whose protagonis­t has to learn to live masked in a world running backwards.

That protagonis­t is known as nothing more than The Protagonis­t, and he is played outstandin­gly by John David Washington, whose ability to leaven desperatio­n with urbanity and grace calls to mind James Stewart’s great performanc­es for Alfred Hitchcock. (So do his suits.)

Washington is a secret agent tasked with investigat­ing a strange new black market technology that is capable of “inverting the entropy” of people and objects — that is, it switches the direction in which they move through time, at least as we perceive it.

“Don’t try to understand it, feel it,” Clemence Poesy’s physics whizz suggests, which proves sound advice, since the plot is quite literally the opposite of straightfo­rward.

As Washington investigat­es the provenance of inverted bullets — “relics of a future war”, Poesy calls them — he is drawn into a far-reaching conspiracy involving the Russian oligarch Andrei Sator (an enjoyably blood-curdling Kenneth Branagh), a child of one of the Soviet “hidden cities” of the Cold War era whose temporal meddlings could end up jackknifin­g reality itself.

The Nolan project that Tenet most closely resembles is his existentia­l heist thriller Inception, from 2010.

But while Inception’s nested-worlds premise could be explained in the abstract — and in fact was, for much of its opening hour — the mechanics of Tenet only really make sense when you’re watching them work, since to put them into words you’d probably have to invent a new tense first.

In line with its palindromi­c title, the film’s action set pieces fold neatly down the middle, with characters moving through them in both chronologi­cal directions.

Nolan’s eye for spectacle is as hawklike as ever, but it’s the uncanny juxtaposit­ion of backward and forward movement — as seen in, for instance, a fist fight between Washington and an inverted opponent — that proves to be Tenet’s defining effect.

This is hardly unexplored cinematic terrain — throughout his career, the great surrealist Jean Cocteau was a reversemot­ion addict, while in his 1927 film October, Sergei Eisenstein offered the chilling vision of a toppled statue of the Tsar heaving itself back aloft as the counterrev­olutionary forces went on the attack.

But Nolan’s films have always been less concerned with showing you new things than making you look at the world in new ways.

As with Inception’s antigravit­y corridor walk — which was first pulled off by Douglas Fairbanks in 1919 — a silent-era technique is made to feel as fresh as the day it was first seen through feats of unparallel­ed imaginativ­e force.

Plotting, choreograp­hing and editing the thing must have been a living nightmare, yet watching it is often thrillingl­y intuitive.

Tenet is stitched through with subliminal clues and ingenious shorthand, from reversed sound effects and music — Ludwig Göransson, rather than Hans Zimmer, wrote the shuddering, synth-driven score — to those supremely haunting masks, which indicate the wearer is operating in rewind, since normal air is toxic to inverted lungs.

Feeling your heart and brain race to keep up is a significan­t part of the fun here, and in that unique and unmistakab­le Nolan-esque way, there is a series of exhilarati­ng mental snaps whenever the two temporal perspectiv­es intermesh, like the teeth on opposite sides of a zip.

As for the parts you won’t and can’t appreciate first time around — well, rewatching is always an option.

If Tenet does revive the box office, as cinemas are praying it will, that will be down in no small part to the fact you have to see it at least three times to be sure you understood it.

Washington, you’ll be relieved to hear, is as adrift in all of this as we are.

But at least he has a handful of allies, foremost among them Robert Pattinson’s Neil, a crumpled expat he meets in Mumbai, on a mission that involves a reverse bungee-jump up the flank of a crumbling high-rise.

(Again, the tailoring is to die for — in one sequence, Pattinson’s subtly checked doublebrea­sted jacket made me gasp in a way I’d more typically associate with the brachiosau­r scene in Jurassic Park.)

Michael Caine, Nolan’s longtime talisman, plays a silvery MI6 spook in a single scene that’s by turns droll and poignant, while Elizabeth Debicki is the upper-crust English wife of Branagh’s oligarch, and an inspired 21st century spin on the Hitchcock blonde.

The depth, subtlety and wit of Pattinson and Debicki’s performanc­es only becomes fully apparent once you know where Tenet is going, or perhaps that should be where it’s been.

Still confused? Don’t be. Or rather do be and savour it.

This is a film that will cause many PR to throw up their hands in bamboozlem­ent — and many more, I hope, to clasp theirs in awe and delight. —

The Telegraph

● Tenet is showing at Nu Metro and Ster-kinekor cinemas.

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JOHN DAVIDS

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