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The 25 best movies of the 21st century, so far, from Spike Lee to ‘Spider-Man'
The 25 best movies of the 21st century, so far, from Spike Lee to ‘Spider-Man'

Miami Herald

time14-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Miami Herald

The 25 best movies of the 21st century, so far, from Spike Lee to ‘Spider-Man'

A quarter of the way into the new century and we've seen triumphant artistic highs from filmmakers both new and old. Our 20th-century masters - Martin Scorsese, Spike Lee, Quentin Tarantino - continue to work at a very high level, while mixing with filmmakers who got their start around the turn of the century. (Christopher Nolan, for example, didn't break big until 2000's "Memento.") In looking at the best movies since the calendar flipped to 2000, we've seen deeply personal works that look at modern life and its unique challenges, as well as facets of our humanity that have stayed the same no matter which century we reside in. We've seen great thrillers, hilarious comedies and stark dramas that ask questions and reveal truths about our world and the way we live. How does one go about choosing the best films of the last 25 years? Gut instinct, mainly. The movies below are the ones that immediately stood out when I set about this exercise, the ones that took my breath away on first watch and continue to loom large both in my mind and in the culture. Some I've seen many times, others only once. But the impact they made was real and lasting. There are two lists of honorable mentions at the end, and there could easily be another 100 noteworthy titles just outside of those. ("Spring Breakers," you were so close!) But there had to be a cutoff somewhere, because we've all got other things to do besides read lists. Your list is not going to match mine, but I'd love to hear what movies made yours without hearing that I'm stupid for the ones that made mine. Let's be civil, let's have fun. We're just talking about movies, after all. With that, here's my list of the 25 best movies of the 21st century, so far. Happy reading, happy watching, and hopefully we can reconvene here to add to the list in another 25 years. 25. 'Spider-Man 2' (2004) In the old days, superhero movies were limited to the occasional "Batman" and "Superman" offerings. That all changed with 2002's "Spider-Man," which took the genre to a new level, paving the way for the modern superhero takeover that locked in when the Marvel Cinematic Universe kicked off with 2008's "Iron Man," changing the movie biz as we know it. But if "Spider-Man" set the template, its sequel upped the ante, with some of the most thrilling superhero sequences and richest storytelling the genre has seen to this day. Credit director Sam Raimi for bringing comic books to life and showing what is possible in the art form, and credit stars Tobey Maguire (in his second turn as your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man) and Alfred Molina (as mad scientist Doctor Octopus) for bringing the story to life. None of what has happened in the genre happens without "Spider-Man," and "Spider-Man 2" is Spidey at his best. 24. 'The Banshees of Inisherin' (2022) Male friendships are a tough egg to crack. Writer-director Martin McDonagh reunites Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, his stars from 2008's "In Bruges," for this extremely dark comedy, set a century ago on an island off the coast of Ireland, about two friends who are perhaps no longer friends. Rather than continuing their familiar pattern of going to the pub, grabbing a pint and talking about nothing, Gleeson's character decides to cut off the friendship, and maybe a few fingers to help make his point. McDonagh takes this civil war to dramatic heights, and ace performances from Kerry Condon and Barry Keoghan add layers of texture to this pensive look at life, legacy and the epidemic of male loneliness. 23. 'Spirited Away' (2001) This utter knockout from director Hayao Miyazaki is a magical, poetic story about youth, nature, beauty and the spirit realm, rendered in thrilling 2D animation and bursting with imagination at every turn. Miyazaki's movies are a universe unto themselves, a portal into an enchanting, mystical state of being, and the effect of watching his films is like being lifted off your feet and taken to another world. "Spirited Away" is like floating and not wanting to come back down. 22. 'Bridesmaids' (2011) The 2000s boys club of comedy, which we will get to in just a second, cashed in on all manner of men behaving badly. What this uproarious comedy proved is that the girls, given the chance, could be just as raunchy as the guys. Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudloph and a scene-stealing Melissa McCarthy lead the cast in this wild comedy about friendship, jealousy, and the trappings of money. Director Paul Feig and screenwriters Wiig and Annie Mumolo stage a number of sidesplitting scenes, but "Bridesmaids" will always be best remembered for the image of Rudolph, in her wedding dress, squatting in the street after a bad meal runs through her like a race car. It's a scene that changed bridal parties - and wedding dress fittings - forever. 21. 'Step Brothers' (2008) Will Ferrell went on a phenomenal five-year streak between 2003 and 2008, knocking out a slew of new comedy classics, from "Old School" to "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy" to "Wedding Crashers" to "Talladega Nights: The Legend of Ricky Bobby." "Step Brothers" was the peak of that run, a surrealist, dopey comedy with Ferrell and his frequent partner in crime, John C. Reilly, constantly one-upping each other as a pair of doofus man-children acting like idiots in a world that somehow tolerated their behavior. The culture soon shifted away from this style of comedy, and director Adam McKay pivoted to more serious fare, but "Step Brothers" represents the absurdly funny pinnacle of a comic style that defined the first decade of the new century. Long live the Catalina Wine Mixer. 20. 'Moonlight' (2016) It's much more than the movie that beat "La La Land" in the best picture race during the biggest blunder in Oscars history. Barry Jenkins' poignant, poetic story about a young man's journey of sexual awakening unfolds over three chapters and features magnificent work from Mahershala Ali, who won an Oscar for his portrayal of a drug dealer who becomes a father figure to the film's young protagonist, as well as Naomie Harris, André Holland and Trevante Rhodes. Writer-director Jenkins is a born filmmaker and this was his breakthrough, and it continues to resonate because of the heartfelt intimacy of its storytelling. 19. 'Inside Out' (2015) Pixar's late 2000s run - the animation innovators released "Ratatouille," "WALL-E," "Up" and "Toy Story 3" between 2007 and 2010 - made the company look untouchable, before "Cars 2" "Brave" and "Monsters University" brought them back down to Earth. But inspiration struck once again in 2015 with this comedy built on the ingenious idea of animating feelings, giving character to the different moods that populate the insides of our heads. Pete Docter and his team brought wonder, imagination and insight into the animation of our collective psyche, helping to normalize the growing conversation around mental health in the process. Plus, it's a really sweet, very funny movie about anger, joy, sadness and all the things we feel on a daily basis. Pixar movies often straddle the line of being for children or adults, and "Inside Out" is the team at its absolute best, getting to have it both ways. 18. 'Donnie Darko' (2001) The world was introduced to Jake Gyllenhaal as angsty teenager Donnie Darko (apologies to those who knew him from "Bubble Boy") in writer-director Richard Kelly's monumentally trippy exploration of the intersection of youth culture, suburbia and interdimensional portals. Kelly manages to satirize the high school experience while giving us an awkward antihero to believe in, and his use of Tears for Fears' "Head Over Heels" as an introduction to the movie's world set a standard for needle drops to follow. (Similarly, Gary Jules' dark cover of Tears for Fears' "Mad World" set the mold for every slowed-down cover of a popular hit that would populate every movie trailer for the next two decades, and it still hasn't been topped.) Kelly took the blueprint for teenage coming-of-age movies and gave it a new spin for uncertain times. Out with the old, in with the anxiety. 17. 'Enter the Void' (2009) Talk about trippy: director Gaspar Noé's neon-lit fever dream is a disembodied experience that feels like watching a soul hover over its own body. Set in Tokyo, Noé follows a drug dealer's ascent into the afterlife, framing it as a psychedelic freak-out and a gorgeously fluid work of technical marvel. Noé is a bad boy provocateur whose pretentions often get the best of him, and that happens here as well, but it's such a boldly audacious work that it hardly matters. The bonkers opening titles sequence alone delivers a bigger jolt than most movies in their entire runtimes. 16. 'Portrait of a Lady on Fire' (2019) In writer-director Céline Sciamma's romantic period drama, passion simmers like a kettle boiling over. In 18th-century France, Marianne (Noémie Merlant) arrives on a small island to paint a portrait of Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), who is soon to be married. But she's a restless subject, and her hesitancy to pose for the painting is rooted in her reluctance to be married off per her family's wishes. Meanwhile, the more time the pair spends together the more their connection grows, lust and forbidden love spilling over into obsession. Sciamma and her actresses create a work of deep intimacy, and cinematographer Claire Mathon shoots her subjects like she's seating them for a painting of her own. It's a work of art that belongs in a museum. 15. 'Frances Ha' (2012) Writer-director Noah Baumbach's creative collaboration with Greta Gerwig began with 2010's "Greenberg" but fully blossomed in this daffy comic drama, which is singularly built around Gerwig's ineffable charms. Gerwig plays Frances Halladay, a New York dreamer who's too old to be as flighty as she is but too young and idealistic to have been beaten down by the world; "Frances Ha" is a dizzyingly delightful showcase for Gerwig and allows her to shine like a diamond. She went on to become an auteur in her own right (see "Lady Bird"), her partnership with Baumbach would blossom into a marriage - the pair was married in 2023 - and they'd go on to collaborate on "Barbie," one of the most successful movies of all time. Their creative bond was sewn on "Frances Ha." 14. 'Bowling for Columbine' (2002) Rabble-rausing director Michael Moore took on the hot-button issue of gun control in his fire-breathing 2002 documentary, which came as school shootings were starting to become an unfortunate norm in American society. Moore took on the subject with his trademark mixture of wit, wisdom and humor, presenting an issue that should have been common sense but still remains heavily debated today. "Bowling for Columbine" even presents Marilyn Manson as a voice of reason, so OK, not all of it has aged gracefully. But it remains a seminal work that, if anything, proved itself to be way ahead of its time. 13. 'The Irishman' (2019) Ah, the Scorsese slot. This list was kept to one entry per director, and there's no way Scorsese wasn't going to be a part of the mix. The question was whether to go with the ridiculously entertaining "The Wolf of Wall Street," the wrenching "Killers of the Flower Moon" or the mournfully soulful "The Irishman," and this felt like the most meaningful of the three. "The Irishman" takes stock and looks back at a life lived doing dirty work, and where it lands you in the end. The answer is an empty room, as is seen in the movie's deeply haunting final moments. Scorsese, 82, has barely slowed down, and he could have another 10-plus years of filmmaking in him. (Clint Eastwood is 95 and is still going strong.) But when it's all said and done, "The Irishman" will stand out as his grand late-in-life masterwork, the one where the gangster life he's returned to so many times comes calling for answers. 12. 'Inception' (2010) Christopher Nolan made this mind-bending action extravaganza in between two "Batman" movies, which is kind of like Coppola taking a break from "Godfather" films to make "The Conversation." Leo DiCaprio leads a stellar cast in a film about thieves, dreams and the nature of ideas, fertile ground for a heist movie that takes place across several planes of reality. Nolan's visuals are incredible - cityscapes fold in on themselves - and he presents a challenging narrative that can still be confusing over umpteen watches. It sure beats the alternative, movies that look flat and don't challenge viewers and don't have anything to say. Still thrilling, still grandiose, still visionary, "Inception" rules. 11. 'Moulin Rouge!' (2001) The jukebox musical as iPod stuck on shuffle, before there were iPods and before shuffling was a concept. Baz Luhrmann's red-drenched musical masterpiece is absolutely out of its mind, with "Smells Like Teen Spirit" blasting in a club in 1900 Paris, 67 years before Kurt Cobain was born a half a world away. Luhrmann throws everything at the camera and fills the frame with so much noise that it's like the movie is daring you to resist it. Do so at your own peril. "Moulin Rouge!" earns its exclamation point by absolutely going for it at every moment, and Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman are forever minted for strapping in, fully committing and going along for the whole crazy ride. 10. 'La La Land' (2016) Writer-director Damien Chazelle's movie musical is an ode to the movies, Los Angeles and love itself. It leaps off the screen with bold visuals and the wonderful chemistry between stars Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, but it might have been simply an exercise in technical mastery had it not had the chutzpah to deliver a stark ending that pulls the rug out from underneath the viewer. Sometimes love isn't enough, sometimes external forces are at play, and sometimes life doesn't work out the way it does in the movies, and that is "La La Land's" masterstroke. Any movie can serve up a happy ending, but it's the poignancy of the downer ending, and what it says about love, that takes this movie from simply great to an all-time classic. 9. 'Mulholland Drive' (2001) Another Los Angeles-set story, but David Lynch's noir is the inverse of "La La Land's" sunny dreamscape. The maestro looks at the dashed dreams of Hollywood in this puzzle box mystery thriller, which was originally envisioned as a TV pilot but later reconfigured into a standalone movie. It's Lynch's grand ode to the seediness of his adopted home, a place where dumpster monsters dwell and weird cowboys come calling and clubs feature lip-syncing performers who faint before your very eyes. More than 20 years later, its mysteries still envelop viewers, and Naomi Watts' performance - her Stateside breakthrough - continues to astonish. And with Lynch's death earlier this year, "Mulholland Drive" is perhaps the greatest key to his universe that he left behind. 8. 'Paddington 2' (2017) The world would be a better place if we all lived by Paddington's playbook. The lovable, adorable British bear is our host for this lovely follow-up to 2015's "Paddington," where the marmalade-scarfing gentle soul is sent to prison after he's framed for a crime he didn't commit. No matter, he's soon got the prisoners marching to his drum, as writer-director Paul King creates a world of wonderment, whimsy and British charm that serves as an antidote to so much of the cruelty of today's world. And Hugh Grant is simply smashing as Phoenix Buchanan, the story's villain, a role he was utterly born to play. 7. 'School of Rock' (2003) Director Richard Linklater loves his pet projects. He followed up his '90s romance "Before Sunrise" with a pair of sequels that show how youthful love and attraction shift over the years. He spent over a decade making "Boyhood," following his cast as as they aged in real time. But in "School of Rock," his pet project is Jack Black, and he dials into Black's manic, childlike, rock demon essence better than any filmmaker before or since. "School of Rock," which was written by Mike White, is essentially a silly comedy about a substitute teacher who poses as someone else and teaches his students to play instruments. But what Linklater conjures out of Black transforms it into a heartwarming comedy about youth and belonging, and he makes it a towering testament to the sheer power of rock and roll. It rocks. 6. 'You Can Count On Me' (2000) Writer-director Kenneth Lonergan's debut feature stars Mark Ruffalo, in his breakthrough role, and Laura Linney as a pair of grown siblings dealing with life's never-ending series of difficulties. Linney plays a loan officer at a small town bank, Ruffalo plays a drifter who can't stay out of trouble, or his own way. Both are reeling in their own way after the death of their parents, who died in a car crash when they were children. Lonergan tells a tender story of family and forgiveness, and Ruffalo and Linney are golden together as a brother and sister dealing with what life has thrown at them the best they can. 5. 'Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood' (2019) Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt lead Quentin Tarantino's late '60s Hollywood odyssey, as the filmmaker explores the dark side of the Summer of Love and the burgeoning dawn of a new American era. Tarantino's dialogue crackles and he captures Pitt in what may be a career best role, as a who's who of young Hollywood (Austin Butler, Sydney Sweeney, Mikey Madison, Maya Hawke, Margaret Qualley) springboard to big careers in the movie's wake. "Kill Bill" was Tarantino's action epic ("Vol. 1" remains a note perfect film) and "Inglourious Basterds" has him playing with history like he's moving around pieces on a chessboard, but "Once Upon a Time" is Tarantino firmly in his element, relaxed and cool, and having a ball. 4. 'In the Mood for Love' (2000) Rarely has a movie been as punch drunk on its own sense of romance as Wong Kar-wai's stunner, about a pair of neighbors in Hong Kong in the early 1960s who come to realize their respective spouses are having an affair with one another. Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung are the two neighbors, and their sense of yearning and the romantic tension between them is almost unbearable, as Shigeru Umebayashi intoxicating "Yumeji's Theme" repeats on the soundtrack like it's scoring their lives. The movie has a keen sense of style (Cheung's dresses alone are worthy of their own coffee table book), mood and longing that have lingered for years and will continue to for many more to come. 3. 'The Royal Tenenbaums' (2001) It starts with "Hey Jude," which was sort of like writer-director Wes Anderson pointing to the fence and calling his shot. "The Royal Tenenbaums" is Anderson's third film, and it came as he was still developing his sense of diorama-like visual presentation, which hadn't yet fully taken over his productions. Anderson fixes his eye on a New York family, led by Gene Hackman's Royal Tenenbaum, whose failings as a father have cast a pall over his children (played by Luke Wilson, Ben Stiller and Gwyneth Paltrow, who plays his adopted daughter). Anderson tells a large, sweeping story on an intimate scale and locks in on his theme of family, particularly errant fathers, that continue to drive his work. 2. 'Lost in Translation' (2003) Sofia Coppola's second film, after 1999's "The Virgin Suicides," is a dreamy romantic drama about a drifting actor (Bill Murray) and a young bride (Scarlett Johansson) who meet at a hotel in Tokyo and spend a few days getting lost together. Their connection is undefined, but they are drawn to one another, if only for this fleeting time under these odd circumstances, where they're both far away from home and feeling a sense of loneliness and isolation. Coppola captures that feeling of otherness, of feeling out of place in a foreign land, and Murray and Johansson are magic as the mismatched pair, who complete something within one another. The moment they share at the end of the movie when he whispers in her ear is a great unsolved mystery of film (what'd he say?!). But it's not what he said that matters, it's the feeling of the moment they share as their time together comes to a close. 1. '25th Hour' (2002) Only a New Yorker as tried and true as Spike Lee could create the one true 9/11 film, and all these years after the tragedy, the only one that matters. Lee sets his story in the wake of the attacks, and they hang over the movie like a storm cloud. Edward Norton plays a drug dealer during his last day of freedom before going off to do a seven-year prison bid. He gets together with his pals (played by Barry Pepper and Philip Seymour Hoffman) for one last hang, and spends time with his girlfriend (Rosario Dawson) and father (Brian Cox). Norton, still in the zone as one of his generation's best actors, gives a captivating, full bodied performance, but it's Lee's depiction of New York, bruised but not broken, that still delivers chills. He's in the debris, shooting down into the empty site where the Twin Towers once stood tall, and his fury can be felt emanating through the screen. It's a breathtaking achievement in artistry, the initial gut punch from his can still be felt today, and no film has achieved the same level of impact since. Just missed the cut: "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan" (2006), "Michael Clayton" (2007), "The Tree of Life" (2011), "Sexy Beast" (2000), "There Will Be Blood" (2007) 10 more: "Top Gun: Maverick" (2022), "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" (2010), "The Florida Project" (2017), "Silver Linings Playbook" (2012), "The Descent" (2005), "The Act of Killing" (2012), "First Reformed" (2017), "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" (2000), "Oldboy" (2003), "mother!" (2017) Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Review – Batman and Robin #23: Memento Mori
Review – Batman and Robin #23: Memento Mori

Geek Dad

time09-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Dad

Review – Batman and Robin #23: Memento Mori

Batman and Robin #23 cover, via DC Comics. Ray: The mystery of Memento, the strange supernatural serial killer haunting Gotham, has been one of the darkest to find Batman and Robin in a while. What first started as the legacy of the killings perpetrated by Batman's old detective mentor have transformed into something else entirely – a demonic mystery involving a killer who jumps bodies and refuses to die. And that's led Batman to seek out help from an unlikely source – Etrigan the Demon, who has been an ally of Batman in his alter ego as Jason Blood. Etrigan provides some surprising visions – of a twisted ritual performed well over a hundred years ago, to summon a demon into the body of a cult leader. But the demon had other ideas, taking the son of the man who dared to summon him instead – and kicking off a legacy of evil. That seems to be the demon's MO now – which makes the race to find Damian all the more pressing. The curse of Memento. Via DC Comics. Damian, meanwhile, has left his role as Robin, but that hasn't kept him out of the action. He's currently in subterranean Gotham, teaming up with the Gotham City Irregulars, against Memento's plot. But the villain is far smarter and older than him, and the kids are being lured into a trap. By the time Batman and Robin finally reunite, there's some great emotion there that hints at a better future for the dynamic duo – but first they'll have to get out of this situation alive. Because Memento makes his move at the end of the issue, as we get one shocking reveal after another, setting the stage for a tense final issue. It was a pretty big risk by PKJ to set his entire run so far around one mystery, but I think it's worked. This story calls back to some of Batman's best recent stories and also pits Batman against a realm of evil he rarely explores – the dark supernatural. But I have a feeling not all of his allies are getting out alive. To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week. GeekDad received this comic for review purposes. Liked it? Take a second to support GeekDad and GeekMom on Patreon!

Why Scotland needs to be cooler than Notting Hill's Honey amid influx of Hollywood A-listers
Why Scotland needs to be cooler than Notting Hill's Honey amid influx of Hollywood A-listers

Scotsman

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

Why Scotland needs to be cooler than Notting Hill's Honey amid influx of Hollywood A-listers

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... In the film Notting Hill, when Honey (sister of Hugh Grant's character) is introduced to fictional film star Anna Scott (Julia Roberts), she responds with an expletive, then explains: 'This is one of those key moments in life when it's possible you can be really, genuinely cool, and I'm going to fail just 100 per cent.' She continues disconcertingly: 'I absolutely, totally and utterly adore you... I genuinely believe, and I've believed for some time now, that we could be best friends.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Scotland currently finds itself in a similar situation with filming for forthcoming flick The Odyssey, directed by Christopher Nolan and starring Matt Damon, Tom Holland, Zendaya, Robert Pattinson and Anne Hathaway, happening in Moray. Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas backstage after an award-filled night at the Oscars last year (Picture: Al Seib/Ampas) | Getty Images So it was that Nolan, famed for Memento, Dunkirk and Oppenheimer, visited Elgin's Moray Playhouse to watch the new F1 film. The cinema posted on social media he had 'politely declined' photographs as he wanted to 'stay incognito' but added: 'Absolutely buzzing doesn't come close.'

James Cameron labels Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning triumph 'a moral cop out'
James Cameron labels Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning triumph 'a moral cop out'

Metro

time01-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Metro

James Cameron labels Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning triumph 'a moral cop out'

James Cameron has criticised Sir Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning blockbuster Oppenheimer after signing up to direct a film on the fallout at Hiroshima. Titanic and Avatar director Cameron, 70, is helming a screen adaptation of upcoming book Ghosts of Hiroshima. The book by Charles Pellegrino is based on 'years of forensic archaeology' alongside over 200 interviews with survivors of the atomic bomb dropping in August 1945 and their families. Discussing his approach for the upcoming film, Cameron shared his vision and how it differed quite drastically from that of Sir Christopher and his 2023 hit movie. Known for being outspoken, Cameron gave his frank opinion on what the film did – and didn't – cover and speculated as to why. 'It's interesting what he stayed away from. Look, I love the filmmaking, but I did feel that it was a bit of a moral cop out,' he told Deadline, adding that 'it's not like Oppenheimer didn't know the effects'. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video 'He's got one brief scene in the film where we see — and I don't like to criticise another filmmaker's film – but there's only one brief moment where he sees some charred bodies in the audience and then the film goes on to show how it deeply moved him. 'But I felt that it dodged the subject.' The scene shows Cillian Murphy as titular physicist J Robert Oppenheimer having a nightmare after seeing slides depicting casualties and the impact of his work, leading to him to imagine the face melting off a young woman who was played by Sir Christopher's daughter, Flora, in a cameo. However, despite its box office and awards success – grossing over $975million (£708m) and winning seven Oscars – Cameron is not the first to question the film's apparent reluctance to engage with the horrific outcome of its protagonist's work. The two bombs dropped on Japanese cities Hiroshima and Nagasaki are thought to have killed between 150,000 and 246,000 people. Cameron added: 'I don't know whether the studio or Chris felt that that was a third rail that they didn't want to touch, but I want to go straight at the third rail. I'm just stupid that way.' Sir Christopher previously shared his reasons for choosing not to depict the bombings in detail, explaining: 'I think really, as a filmmaker, you can't be overly conscious about why you choose to do things. You have to run on instinct to a degree. 'But the feeling for me as a filmmaker was very strongly that to depart from Oppenheimer's experience would betray the terms of the storytelling.' He shared (via NBC) that Oppenheimer learned about the bombings taking place on the radio, 'the same as the rest of the world', which he found 'a shock' when realising that was the case while reading the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography American Prometheus. 'Everything is his experience, or my interpretation of his experience,' the Memento director continued. 'Because as I keep reminding everyone, it's not a documentary. It is an interpretation. That's my job.' More Trending Cameron, who has said his film will be 'apolitical', has also revealed he expects Ghosts of Hiroshima to be the lowest-grossing film of his career, given the topic. While that might sound a surprising statement, given his status as king of the Hollywood blockbusters it makes a little more sense. He currently boasts three films in the top five list of highest-grossing movies ever, with Avatar in the top spot on $2.92billion (£2.12bn), its 2022 sequel Avatar: The Way of Life at third and previous long-running number one Titanic at four. Third instalment Avatar: Fire and Ash is due for release in December, while Sir Christopher will be back next summer with his take on Greek epic The Odyssey, starring Matt Damon. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: 28 Years Later ending explained by star, and what it could mean for sequel MORE: 'Mind-bending' horror film available to stream for free as sequel wows critics MORE: Ralph Fiennes warns new Voldemort in Harry Potter TV series of danger

Christopher Nolan's 'Memento' returns to Dubai theatres for 25th anniversary
Christopher Nolan's 'Memento' returns to Dubai theatres for 25th anniversary

Khaleej Times

time16-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Christopher Nolan's 'Memento' returns to Dubai theatres for 25th anniversary

Front Row Filmed Entertainment has announced the regional re-release of Memento, Christopher Nolan's mind-bending breakthrough film, to mark its 25th anniversary. Beginning June 19, the cult classic will screen across theaters in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Lebanon, Egypt, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman, offering cinephiles a rare opportunity to experience the puzzle-box thriller in its intended format — on the big screen. Starring Guy Pearce, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Joe Pantoliano, Memento follows a man with anterograde amnesia who uses tattoos and Polaroid photos to track down his wife's killer — a narrative told in reverse, mirroring the protagonist's fractured memory. The film earned Nolan his first Oscar nomination and grossed over $40 million globally on a modest $9 million budget. Today, it holds a 93% score on Rotten Tomatoes and ranks among IMDb's Top 50 films of all time. Following the immense regional success of Nolan's Oppenheimer and anniversary runs of Interstellar and Inception, Memento returns not as a nostalgia act but as a celebration of Nolan's influence and the enduring power of innovative storytelling. For those who've never seen it, and for those who think they remember it — this is a film that demands to be experienced again. Or perhaps, for the first time.

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