Robert Pattinson (left) and John David Washington (right) in Tenet Melinda Sue Gordon
Bullets racing towards guns, not from them; dust explosions deflating back down into the solid earth. This, Tenetâs writer and director Christopher Nolan assures us, is time inversion. It is absolutely not time travel.
Nolan has been peculiarly insistent that Tenet, which is visually thrilling, superbly acted and emotionally empty, isnât about time travel, but about inversion of the time stream, causing material to run backwards instead of forwards.
The thing is, Tenet is actually very much about time travel. Yes, there are backwards bullets and inverted fight scenes that are so inventively choreographed that they are basically impossible to describe, but people do also go back in time to try to change events to ward off some kind of third world war.
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If that isnât time travel, then what is? Saying that it isnât seems to be Nolanâs way of telling us that this isn’t some kitsch flick for Back to The Future fans (and indeed, it isnât), but a serious film grounded in theoretical physics. Reminiscent of the time dilation of Nolanâs 2014 grand space odyssey Interstellar, Tenetâs concept of inversion draws heavily on the idea that time reversal is technically possible.
For the first hour or so, this doesnât matter much anyway, because until the midpoint Tenet is basically just a Bond film on steroids. John David Washington plays a secret agent named simply âThe Protagonistâ, who bungee-jumps off luxury apartments in Mumbai, orchestrates a 747 crash and attends exposition-heavy ballistics meetings with a physics whizz played by ClĂ©mence PoĂ©sy.
PoĂ©sy explains about those backwards bullets and the âdetritus of a coming warâ that she keeps finding and which has presumably been sent back in time from the future, before helpfully reassuring her confused audience, âDonât try to understand it. Feel it.â She doesnât really look like she understands it all either.
The Protagonist joins forces with louche British spy Neil, played by Robert Pattinson, and together they set about disrupting the inevitably malign ambitions of Kenneth Branaghâs heavily accented Russian arms dealer, doing something with plutonium and absolutely not time travelling. They do go back to a previous moment in time through an inversion turnstile to help the arms dealerâs abused wife Kat played by Elizabeth Debicki. But that definitely isnât time travel, just inverting time so that they are in the past. Totally different.
Tenetâs biggest issue isnât actually that its âtemporal pincerâ plot (a temporal pincer is a⊠no, never mind) is a little heavy on the exposition and yet still head-spinningly difficult to understand. All that feels somewhat displaced by the rush of the car chases, the pounding score, the yachts and the stunning sets. As a blockbuster to reopen cinemas, Tenet is great fun.
Tenetâs problem is that it has no real heart. Nolan often tries to bend time to his will, but he usually does so with a narrative anchored in love. In Inception, Leonardo DiCaprioâs characterâs longing for his wife underscores the compression of time in the dreamworld; in Interstellar, Matthew McConaugheyâs brief absence in space as his daughter ages decades in Earth years moves us beyond the spectacle and the science.
In Tenet, however, the emotional development seems secondary. The stakes, despite the coming apocalypse, never feel that high. Indeed, the most emotive moment of the whole film comes, oddly, from the arms dealer.
Tenet is slick, solid big screen entertainment, but it will not, as its characters ask repeatedly of each other, cause anyone to look at the world in a new way.
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