yeah, wasn't that Interstellar...Nomis wrote:He did said he wanted to make something for his kids..
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This could obviously mean a lot of things, but here it is.As Nolan has grown older, his sense of his audience has changed. As Emma put it, “Where, in the past, he never made movies for any reason other than the fact that he wanted to see those movies himself, now he wants to make films he can watch with his kids.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/02/magaz ... nolan.html
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She was saying that about Interstellar and future projects.
Why he can't watch Inception or The Dark Knight Trilogy with his kids as well?shauner111 wrote:She was saying that about Interstellar and future projects.
If that's true, then it's a shame really, because Nolan is at his best when he's doing hard hitting noir film where they're least concerned about how the audience feels or to make them comfortable (Memento, The prestige and TDK).
It's a shame he wants to do something for his kids?T-minus 10 wrote:If that's true, then it's a shame really, because Nolan is at his best when he's doing hard hitting noir film where they're least concerned about how the audience feels or to make them comfortable (Memento, The prestige and TDK).
And what she said never implied he'd be doing family films. Interstellar was a love letter to his kids yet it had the darkest turn of any of his films.
It's a shame because he isn't that good at it as Spielberg.ChristNolan wrote:It's a shame he wants to do something for his kids?T-minus 10 wrote:If that's true, then it's a shame really, because Nolan is at his best when he's doing hard hitting noir film where they're least concerned about how the audience feels or to make them comfortable (Memento, The prestige and TDK).
And what she said never implied he'd be doing family films. Interstellar was a love letter to his kids yet it had the darkest turn of any of his films.
I wasn't talking about family film, but rather it seems that Nolan in the last couple of films simplify many elements to reach a wide audience, and it result in a lesser vision or film overall.
I still can't get over how he never mentioned Tom in the end of Interstellar, considering he was an elemental charater in the drama, but of course there's one reason for that, and that's not to upset the audience feelings (if you have another reason, I'd be happy to hear it)
And certainly agree Interstellar is an elegiac film but it's not matching the darkness and the hard hitting drama (for example Nolan even admitted that TDKR isn't as psychological scarring as TDK) of likes Memento, The Prestige and TDK (character, narrative and thematic wise).
EDIT: BTW i find Interstellar to be a great film.
Nolan is so naive.
Doesn't he realize his oh so precious kids will be rebellious teenagers before he knows it? They're not going to wanna watch some embarrassing movie their embarrassing dad made.
Doesn't he realize his oh so precious kids will be rebellious teenagers before he knows it? They're not going to wanna watch some embarrassing movie their embarrassing dad made.
Worst of those things being: Nolan is only going to make PG-13 movies until he dies.Godzilla wrote:This could obviously mean a lot of things, but here it is.As Nolan has grown older, his sense of his audience has changed. As Emma put it, “Where, in the past, he never made movies for any reason other than the fact that he wanted to see those movies himself, now he wants to make films he can watch with his kids.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/02/magaz ... nolan.html
Fucking kids, always ruin everything.
Every movie he's made besides Following and Memento he can watch with his kids.Godzilla wrote:This could obviously mean a lot of things, but here it is.As Nolan has grown older, his sense of his audience has changed. As Emma put it, “Where, in the past, he never made movies for any reason other than the fact that he wanted to see those movies himself, now he wants to make films he can watch with his kids.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/02/magaz ... nolan.html