Christopher Nolan Fans
Christopher Nolan Fans

Posts Tagged ‘Jonathan Nolan’

TV News

Jonah Nolan Teaming Up With J.J. Abrams for New TV Series

Posted on Thursday, September 9th, 2010 at 3:05 pm by TeddyBlass

jj jonah tv Jonah Nolan Teaming Up With J.J. Abrams for New TV Series

Entertainment Weeky‘s Michael Ausiello is reporting that J.J. Abrams (Star Trek, Lost, Fringe) is currently using his pull in the TV business to shop around a new crime-thriller series created by Jonah Nolan, co-writer of The Dark Knight and The Prestige. Jonah (younger brother to Christopher Nolan) has an impressive, albeit short, resume when it comes to writing for film, but this is his first foray into writing for television. The idea was apparently good enough to attract Abrams and his Bad Robot production company to the project. Abrams’ notable TV background is helping grab attention from the networks, one of which is already extremely interested according to reports. No word yet as to what exactly the series is about, but it looks promising.

It stands to be a busy next couple of years for Jonah Nolan, who is currently writing the next installment in the Batman series and is rumored to have a shot at directing the next Superman installment. Thanks to allstarr55js in the forums for the tip!

Inception

Dreaming, Creating, Perceiving, and Filmmaking

Posted on Friday, August 6th, 2010 at 4:56 pm by AlexHaas

inception chris directing Dreaming, Creating, Perceiving, and Filmmaking

The preface of INCEPTION: The Shooting Script contains an amazing 10-page interview with writer-director Christopher Nolan. Interviewed by his brother, author and screenwriter, Jonathan Nolan, the two delve into the story behind the genesis of the idea for the for film and the decade-long process it took to write it.

Christopher Nolan became fascinated by the idea that the human mind can play tricks with itself. “My interest in dreams came from this notion of realizing that when you dream you create the world that you are perceiving, and I thought that feedback loop was pretty amazing.” Mr. Nolan recalls a time in college where he was enjoying a mid-day siesta. “I remember having a dream and saying to myself, ‘Okay, there’s a bunch of books on the shelf. If I pull a book off the shelf and look at it, can I read the words in the book?’ And I could, because your brain is making up the words in the book.”

Always interested in making a heist film about corporate espionage, Christopher Nolan continued toying with the idea of a film involving dreams. Once he imagined combining the two, Inception started to become a reality.

After I finish every film, I look at what I might do next. I would get the draft of Inception out and would read it, again. I would show it to Emma [Emma Thomas] and sometimes show you [Jonathan Nolan] to get more thoughts on it. But I never knew quite how to finish it until I realized that the antagonist of the film should be the guy’s wife.

It completely unlocked the end of the film. It completely unlocked how you could make something that a wider audience might care about. Because to me, whenever you deal in the world of esoteric or overly complex science fiction, or heist movies, or film noir, you’re working for a smaller audience. If you’re going to do a massive movie, though, you’ve got to be able to unlock that more universal experience for yourself as well as for the audience. That’s what it took for me. As soon as I realized that Mal would be his wife, it became completely relatable.

Having written the entire screenplay himself, Christopher Nolan continues on to discuss self-doubt during the production of the film and his tricks for keeping a level head. The two continue further discussing the challenges and rewards in working with Inception‘s stellar cast on such a grand-scale actioner.

Laced throughout this book (and the script) are inserts of some crazy Inception concept art along with hand-written notes, story outlines, and sketches made by Christopher Nolan during the development phase of this project. If you’ve fallen in love with Christopher Nolan’s (possibly greatest) film like the rest of us, INCEPTION: The Shooting Script is definitely worth checking out.

Rumors Superman

Is Chris Columbus Directing ‘Man of Steel’?

Posted on Thursday, July 8th, 2010 at 1:45 pm by TeddyBlass

ChrisColumbus Is Chris Columbus Directing Man of Steel?So here’s an opportunity to take your mind off of Inception for a couple minutes – MTV SplashPage is reporting that Chris Columbus (the man behind the first two Harry Potter films) is rumored to have been offered the job to direct the next Superman movie. The screenplay, as you know, is being written by Batman Begins scribe David S. Goyer and is rumored to be titled Man of Steel. Christopher Nolan decided to oversee the project in a producer-like role after Goyer told the Dark Knight director ‘I have this thought about how you would approach Superman’ sometime earlier this year.

Since then, David S. Goyer himself and Christopher Nolan’s brother Jonathan have both been rumored to be under consideration to direct the new Superman. But MTV is reporting that Columbus is said to be “the right fit” for the superhero film according to insiders at Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures. Could they be this far in the process of setting up the film?

More recently, Christopher Nolan told MTV News that his current focus is on fine tuning the right story for Superman rather than finding the right actor.

“It’s all about figuring out exactly the tone and meaning of the story and how you’re going to approach it,” said Nolan. “Casting comes later, and all of those considerations come later.”

Read the full article over at MTV SplashPage to get the full scoop. What do you think of Chris Columbus directing Man of Steel? Is he the right fit?

UPDATE (July 13, 2010): It looks like this rumor has been busted. Chris Columbus will not be directing Man of Steel.

Inception

Nolan Makes Hollywood’s First Existential Heist Film

Posted on Sunday, April 11th, 2010 at 1:06 pm by TeddyBlass

In a new, long, and fascinating edition of the Hero Complex series for the LA Times, Geoff Boucher got writer and director Christopher Nolan to shed a little bit more light on this summer’s most complex popcorn film; Inception. Boucher was able to visit the set last year during filming to talk with Nolan and other important members of the film. What he learned then is enough to make any fan salivate with anticipation. In the article, Nolan explains how this project has been floating around in his head ever since he was a teenager fascinated with dreams, and how this idea has been on paper, in script form, for 7 or 8 years.

Ever since he was a youngster, he says, he was intrigued by the way he would wake up and then, while he fell back into a lighter sleep, hold on to the awareness that he was in fact dreaming. Then there was the even more fascinating feeling that he could study the place and tilt the events of the dream.

“You can look around and examine the details and pick up a handful of sand on the beach,” Nolan said. “I never particularly found a limit to that; that is to say, that while in that state your brain can fill in all that reality. I tried to work that idea of manipulation and management of a conscious dream being a skill that these people have. Really the script is based on those common, very basic experiences and concepts, and where can those take you? And the only outlandish idea that the film presents, really, is the existence of a technology that allows you to enter and share the same dream as someone else.”

The article mentions Chris’ mistaken reputation for making cold, “frosty” films. On first glance his films could appear to be that way – and Inception is no different. However, Chris explains how his approach to this movie initially started that way, but then changed:

“I originally wrote it as a heist movie, and heist movies traditionally are very deliberately superficial in emotional terms,” Nolan said. “They’re frivolous and glamorous, and there’s a sort of gloss and fun to it. I originally tried to write it that way, but when I came back to it I realized that — to me — that didn’t work for a film that relies so heavily on the idea of the interior state, the idea of dream and memory. I realized I needed to raise the emotional stakes. What we found in working on ‘Batman’ is that it’s the emotionalism that best connects the audience with the material. The character issues, those are the things that pull the audience through it and amplify the experience no matter how strange things get.”

And Inception is bound to get strange. The film is filled not only with mind-warping ideas, but mind-warping effects too. After all, it is a giant summer popcorn movie – and its budget reflects that. The LA Times article goes on to explain how some of those effects were achieved both in-camera – a method that Chris prefers in this modern age of pixel manipulation – and  out-of-camera. This article is far too fascinating to do it justice by quoting it all here, so head on over to LA Times to read all Geoff was able to reveal. Inception hits theaters in less than 100 days on July 16th.

Superman The Dark Knight Rises

Nolan Clarifies His Superman and Batman Plans

Posted on Wednesday, March 10th, 2010 at 12:51 pm by AlexHaas

batman superman logo 300x202 Nolan Clarifies His Superman and Batman PlansThe LA Times recently talked to Christopher Nolan as part of their ongoing Hero Complex series, where he took time to explain and clarify just exactly what is going on with The Man of Steel and Batman 3. The rumors that Batman Begins writer, David S. Goyer, is developing a Superman screenplay are true and it seems Goyer brought it up to Chris when things were coming to an impasse on the next Batman project.

“He basically told me, ‘I have this thought about how you would approach Superman. I immediately got it, loved it and thought: That is a way of approaching the story I’ve never seen before that makes it incredibly exciting. I wanted to get Emma and I involved in shepherding the project right away and getting it to the studio and getting it going in an exciting way.”

Christopher Nolan also discusses how the Superman films have been approached in a lot of different ways. He says this emphasizing the idea that Batman exists in a world where he is the only superhero. Nolan says that his approach on a Superman film would be very similar: “I only know the way that has worked for us that’s what I know how to do. Each serves to the internal logic of the story. They have nothing to do with each other.”

With all this talk about superhero films, Christopher Nolan continues on to explain the current progress of the Batman trilogy. Nolan explains that his brother, Jonathan Nolan, is “now doing the hard work,” writing the script which is based on David Goyer’s story ideas. “My brother is writing a script for me and we’ll wait to see how it turns out…he’s struggling to put it together into the epic story that you want it to be.”

“Without getting into specifics, the key thing that makes the third film a great possibility for us is that we want to finish our story. And in viewing it as the finishing of a story rather than infinitely blowing up the balloon and expanding the story. We have a great ensemble, that’s one of the attractions of doing another film, since we’ve been having a great time for years.

I’m very excited about the end of the film, the conclusion, and what we’ve done with the characters. My brother has come up with some pretty exciting stuff. Unlike the comics, these thing don’t go on forever in film and viewing it as a story with an end is useful. Viewing it as an ending, that sets you very much on the right track about the appropriate conclusion and the essence of what tale we’re telling. And it hearkens back to that priority of trying to find the reality in these fantastic stories. That’s what we do.”

Thanks for the tip, Rory (filmfanatic)! Let’s hear what you guys think in the comments!!

[via Los Angeles Times]