Nolan fanboys defend him too hard. Yes, Nolan lately has relied too heavily on exposition and over-exposition. He's pushing some narrative boundaries and that comes at a cost, but in Oppenheimer, he's now going through time jumps for simple conversations, treating every scene like a bomb going off when most of the movie is political jargon.
Nolan made me realize how stupid the average person is. Outside of Tenet (which is a bit convoluted), I've never had a hard time following his movies. Yet people always act as if they are the most confusing narratives ever told. Even Inception I thought it was pretty easy to follow. Yet I was surprised when i talked to so many people who didn't understand anything.
@@nerychristian The acting? What acting.. Did you see that masterpiece? It wasn't a movie created for actors to do amazing work... It was a James Bond movie without the trash and actually, you know... smart.
@@edgardoMurnia How was it smart? It's just a typical spy story about stopping a villain from using a nuclear weapon. The only difference is some of the scenes are in reverse.
the dark knight trilogy is the worst offender- every couple of minutes characters stop, to explain the themes of the movie, it particularly took me out, during the third act of the dark knight, where aaron eckhardts two face rams the entire point of the movie down the audiences throat, in a situation, that would call for action, without pausing, to deliver another unnatural sounding speech- still dig those movies, but these exposition dumps where among the most unrealistic parts, of a supposedly realistic universe and took me out of the story, at times. back then, ive wondered, if it was a studio mandated choice (memento, for example, didnt suffer from this), but its arguably grown worse, along with nolans reputation- end of rant
this video feels like 12 minutes of exposition
Nolan fanboys defend him too hard. Yes, Nolan lately has relied too heavily on exposition and over-exposition. He's pushing some narrative boundaries and that comes at a cost, but in Oppenheimer, he's now going through time jumps for simple conversations, treating every scene like a bomb going off when most of the movie is political jargon.
Nolan made me realize how stupid the average person is. Outside of Tenet (which is a bit convoluted), I've never had a hard time following his movies. Yet people always act as if they are the most confusing narratives ever told. Even Inception I thought it was pretty easy to follow. Yet I was surprised when i talked to so many people who didn't understand anything.
Tenet is not convoluted... it's a freaking masterpiece.
It's not a masterpiece. It's a dull movie. The acting was bland. Take away the action sequences, and it has nothing interesting to offer
@@nerychristian The acting? What acting.. Did you see that masterpiece? It wasn't a movie created for actors to do amazing work...
It was a James Bond movie without the trash and actually, you know... smart.
@@edgardoMurnia How was it smart? It's just a typical spy story about stopping a villain from using a nuclear weapon. The only difference is some of the scenes are in reverse.
@@nerychristian Sure buddy... And the Godfather is a family of dudes killing each other with another familiy of dudes...
the dark knight trilogy is the worst offender- every couple of minutes characters stop, to explain the themes of the movie, it particularly took me out, during the third act of the dark knight, where aaron eckhardts two face rams the entire point of the movie down the audiences throat, in a situation, that would call for action, without pausing, to deliver another unnatural sounding speech- still dig those movies, but these exposition dumps where among the most unrealistic parts, of a supposedly realistic universe and took me out of the story, at times. back then, ive wondered, if it was a studio mandated choice (memento, for example, didnt suffer from this), but its arguably grown worse, along with nolans reputation- end of rant