“It’s an adventure film”: Christopher Nolan Considers ‘Oppenheimer’ a Heist Movie Amid Reports of Helming the Next James Bond After Daniel Craig

Nolan candidly said that 'Oppenheimer' is a heist movie, not a biopic.

“It’s an adventure film”: Christopher Nolan Considers ‘Oppenheimer’ a Heist Movie Amid Reports of Helming the Next James Bond After Daniel Craig

SUMMARY

  • Christopher Nolan doesn't consider 'Oppenheimer' as a biopic.
  • The director said his 2023 hit was a heist movie.
  • The $942 million movie was adapted from Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin's biography 'American Prometheus.'
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Christopher Nolan has achieved yet another milestone with his latest movie Oppenheimer as it surpassed the highest-grossing biopic Bohemian Rhapsody with the movie’s worldwide collection of  $942 million. 

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Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas in Conversation with Kai Bird
Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas in Conversation with Kai Bird. Credit: The Graduate Center, CUNY

Nolan, who was in speculation to helm the next James Bond movie after Daniel Craig’s departure as Bond, doesn’t like the term ‘biopic’ as the genre can’t serve justice to the persons on which the project is based. Nolan certainly, doesn’t think of Oppenheimer as a biopic.

Also read: Christopher Nolan Claimed Dark Knight Doesn’t Come Close To $40M Movie, Felt Uncomfortable Being Paid “Millions of dollars of somebody else’s money”

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Christopher Nolan Doesn’t Like The Term ‘Biopic,’ Here’s Why

Christopher Nolan
Christopher Nolan. Credit: The Graduate Center, CUNY

By default or popular notion, Oppenheimer is essentially a biopic since it was adapted from Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin’s biography American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Christopher Nolan, the mastermind behind the huge 2023 hit doesn’t consider the movie as a biopic. Joining a panel at the City University of New York event, Nolan revealed why he is against the term ‘biopic.’

“There is a tendency in biography post-Freud to attribute characteristics of the person you’re dealing with to their genetics from their parents. It’s a very reductive view of a human being. If you’re writing a book that’s 500 pages or 1,000 pages, there’s a way to balance that with their individuality and experiences. When you compress and strip down to the necessary simplicity of a screenplay, it’s incredibly reductive,” he said at the event.

Nolan further believes that the credibility of the concept of biopic as a movie genre is questionable. “This is where the concept of a biopic fails you completely as a genre,” he said. “It’s not a useful genre. I love working in useful genres,” he added. Also, he is far far away from acknowledging Oppenheimer as a biopic. 

Also read: “I’ve been plundering ruthlessly”: Christopher Nolan Was Puzzled After Accused of Copying James Bond for His One Movie Despite Claiming He’s Done It Before

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Oppenheimer Is Not A Biopic, Christopher Nolan Claimed

Christopher Nolan
Christopher Nolan. Credit: charlieanders2/TM & © DC Comics.

If the Cillian Murphy starrer movie is not a biopic, what then? Nolan has an answer for it, at least he thinks Oppenheimer is a heist movie. “It’s the heist film as it applies to the Manhattan Project and the courtroom drama as it applies to the security hearings,” the director continued at the event. It’s “very useful to look at the conventions of those genres and how they can pull the audience and how they can give me communication with the audience.”

“Biopic is something that applies to a film that is not quite registering in a dramatic fashion. You don’t talk about ‘Laurence of Arabia’ as a biopic. You don’t talk about ‘Citizen Kane’ as a biopic. It’s an adventure film. It’s a film about somebody’s life. It’s not a useful genre the same way drama is not a useful genre. It doesn’t give you anything to hold onto.”

In its essence, Nolan believes that even great biographical movies are not limited to the purview of the genre, they go beyond the extent of the thematic significance of the movies that justify the true nature of these movies. In this case, for Nolan, Oppenheimer is a heist movie.

Also read: “Bloody hell Chris, what are we doing here?”: Christopher Nolan Lost Complete Faith in Christian Bale, Couldn’t Defend Him to WB After Seeing His $8M Movie

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Written by Lachit Roy

Articles Published: 1031

Lachit Roy is a seasoned writer specializing in science and entertainment news. Armed with a postgraduate degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Tezpur University, he brings a wealth of knowledge and skill to his craft.

Lachit is particularly passionate about crafting engaging content on entertainment news and trends. A dedicated movie enthusiast, he possesses an in-depth understanding of the cinematic world and takes joy in disseminating the latest updates to the global fandom. When not immersed in writing, Lachit can be found indulging in his love for movies and series, occasionally tending to his garden, but predominantly expanding his expertise in the realms of his interests.