Christopher Nolan is reportedly in the process of setting up his next project, which is said to place its focus on J. Robert Oppenheimer and the atom bomb.
Worth particular note, as pointed out in Mike Fleming Jr.’s Deadline report, is that the Tenet and Dunkirk director has been speaking with “several of the major studios.” Fleming speculates that this could be an extension of Nolan’s famously public criticism of Warner Bros. and HBO Max’s theatrical-and-streaming release approach. Also noted in the report, however, is that it’s not currently clear whether Warner Bros. is among those aiming to secure Nolan’s latest.
For now, the untitled film is described as similar to Dunkirk in scope, with Nolan again diving deep into the World War II era. Previous Nolan collaborator Cillian Murphy, fresh off a turn in John Krasinski’s A Quiet Place sequel, is rumored to be connected with the project.
Oppenheimer, a theoretical physicist, is widely referred to as “the father of the atomic bomb.”
Complex has reached out to a rep for Nolan for additional comment and will update this post accordingly.
In his most recent film Tenet, released roughly a year ago following delays spurred by the earlier days of the pandemic, Nolan enlisted John David Washington and Robert Pattinson for a compelling time inversion tale featuring a soundtrack contribution from Travis Scott and Ludwig Göransson titled “The Plan.”
“I feel like with albums you take your life stories, put them into lyrics and spread them out across 16 songs. … This wasn’t so much about me, but me in this world of Tenet,” Scott later said when reflecting on the unique creative process behind the song.