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The Nolan Variations

The Movies, Mysteries, and Marvels of Christopher Nolan

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An in-depth look at, and written in collaboration with, the man considered to be the most profound, and commercially successful director at work today—a franchise unto himself—whose deeply personal million-dollar blockbuster movies (The Dark Knight (2008), Inception (2010), Dunkirk (2017) among them) have earned more than $4.7 billion worldwide: his work, his influences, his vision, his enigmatic childhood past, and much more. 
A rare, intimate portrait of Christopher Nolan with the full cooperation of Nolan himself who opened up more fully than ever before in his talks with Tom Shone. In chapters structured by themes and motifs ("Time"; "Chaos"), Shone writes of Nolan's thoughts on movies, on plots; on time, identity, perception, chaos, daydreams. Here is Nolan on the evolution of his pictures, and the writers, artists, directors, and thinkers who have inspired and informed his films. To write the book, Tom Shone, who has known Nolan for more than two decades and who spent months with the director, was given unprecedented access to Nolan's notes, scripts, storyboards, and artwork.
In this riveting portrait of an artist, Shone deftly navigates Nolan's themes, influences, and working methods (both in writing and directing). Here is his dislocated, trans-Atlantic childhood ("It makes you feel very differently about the concept of 'home'") . . . how he dreamed up the plot of Inceptionlying awake one night in his dorm ("I prized the imaginative space of listening to music in the dark, thinking about things, imagining things, films, stories") . . . his color-blindness and its effect on Memento ("People are fascinated by other people's perception of the world and the way in which it differs") . . . his obsession with puzzles and optical illusions . . . and much, much more.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 24, 2020
      Drawing on interviews conducted over three years, film critic Shone (The Irishman: The Making of the Movie) shines a light on Christopher Nolan, who has “long perfected the art of talking about his films while giving away nothing about himself.” Shone devotes a chapter to each of Nolan’s films, from his 1998 debut, Following, to the forthcoming Tenet, while tracing a few common themes. These include what the Anglo-American Nolan gained from his teenage years attending a “really establishment, old-fashioned” U.K. boarding school (principally, “how to relate to an establishment you’re inherently rebelling against but can’t push too far”). Another is the counterpoint between his exacting planning while scripting and shooting (“rules are very important” in giving a fantastical story credibility) and his openness to experimentation and “surprise,” as when he unexpectedly discovered the perfect last shot for The Dark Knight in unedited stunt footage. Shone also emphasizes the importance of collaboration for Nolan, including with composer Hans Zimmer (who “teaches me a new musical term with each film”) and Inception’s star Leonardo DiCaprio, whom Nolan credits with pushing the project from a genre heist film toward a “more character-based direction.” Shone provides thoughtful context for Nolan’s commentary, but readers will most value Nolan’s own words about his work.

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  • English

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