Warner Bros. wants to make amends with Christopher Nolan following their breakup in 2021. In an interview with Variety, Warner Bros. Film Group co-CEO Michael De Luca said, "We're hoping to get Nolan back. I think there's a world."
Warner Bros. sent Nolan a seven-figure royalty check
sometime in the past eight months tied to his work on 2020's Tenet. Apparently
"no strings were attached", but Warner Bros. is motivated to repair
its relationship with the director, according to a report.
Nolan and Warner Bros.' public breakup happened across 2020
and 2021. It started when Nolan responded to Warner Bros.' decision to move its
entire 2021 film slate to HBO Max. The director clearly wasn't happy with the
choice, saying, "some of our industry’s biggest filmmakers and most
important movie stars went to bed the night before thinking they were working
for the greatest movie studio and woke up to find out they were working for the
worst streaming service.”
Following this, Nolan chose Universal to help distribute
Oppenheimer, his next film that's due to hit theaters in July. Universal was
reportedly the only studio able to meet Nolan's strict demands, including a
$100 million budget, “total creative control, 20 percent of first-dollar gross,
and a blackout period from which the studio wherein the company would not
release another movie three weeks before or three weeks after his release.”
Nolan and Universal's partnership on Oppenheimer marks the
end of the director's exclusive dealings with Warner Bros. that date back to
2002's Insomnia. Two decades of Nolan and Warner Bros. movies included The Dark
Knight trilogy, Inception, Interstellar, and more.
We'll have to wait and see where Nolan goes for his next
film following Oppenheimer. The upcoming movie is Nolan's first R-rated movie
since 2002, and it's also set to be the longest movie of his career. Nolan is
also touting that the movie recreates the devastation of the first atomic bomb
without using CGI.
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