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Christopher Nolan’s Unmade Films: Movies the ‘Oppenheimer’ Director Almost Made

A Howard Hughes biopic, a crime novel adaptation, and a remake of "The Prisoner" are three films Nolan never got to make.
TODAY -- Pictured: Christopher Nolan on Tuesday, July 18, 2023 -- (Photo by: Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images)
Christopher Nolan
Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty I

There are some directors who have an army oforphaned projects; films that, for whatever reason, never ended up getting shot or released. Quentin Tarantino,David Lynch,Martin Scorsese,Steven Spielberg, and (especially) Luca Guadagnino have whole filmographies of projects they started developing before eventually abandoning.

Christopher Nolan is not one of those directors. Generally speaking, when the British director gets attached to a project, he almost always manages to carry the film out to completion. With the obvious exception of his acclaimed “Dark Knight” Batman trilogy, Nolan isn’t typically a director for hire. Pretty much every film Nolan directs is also written and produced by him, and the multi-hyphenate’s movies usually take awhile to make, with lengthy shoots and lengthier post-production phases required to bring his ambitions stories to life. “Oppenheimer,” his massively scaled biopic about the creator of the atomic bomb, took a relatively speedy 57 days to film; “Tenet,” his previous film, lasted for 96.

“Making films with [Nolan] is real filmmaking to me,” Nolan’s go-to cinematographer Hoyte von Hoytemasaid in an interview with Deadline. “It’s very hands-on and it’s a lot of engineering, always. It’s really switching your mind on to a very classic, visceral way of filmmaking. Nobody makes film like him.”

So with that in mind, it’s not surprising that Nolan usually manages to achieve what he sets out to do as a filmmaker. Still, someone with so many successful releases is bound to get attached to a few projects that don’t pan out at some point. Nolan is no exception, with three films that got lost in development after the director stopped actively pursuing them. In honor of “Oppenheimer’s” release, revisit the three films Nolan almost made, but never finished.

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