Director: Christopher Nolan

Runtime: 210 mins.

My rating: 9.5/10.

Travelling backwards and forwards through time can be confusing at the best of times. Our protagonist is doing both simultaneously while trying to save the world from a ruthless arms dealer. Keep your thinking caps on for this fantastic piece of filmmaking.

I’m gonna address this really quickly. The title says ten out of tenet but that was merely a play on words. The film loses half a mark because of the sound quality. There were certain parts where characters were delivering important pieces of information over roaring trains, oceans and car chases. However, that is probably my only criticism of this movie.

I am always wary of jumping on a bandwagon. I often forego seeing new movies if they are too popular. I don’t know if I am part-hipster or if everyone fawning over something that has been promoted to death sickens me a little inside. For example, Netflix originals sit in my list for months before I watch them because so many people are raving about them. It is a weird habit of mine and one I must kick if I want to be a serious movie-reviewer!

We follow the Protagonist (John David Washington) as he fights a never-ending battle to save the world from certain death via a maniacal arms dealer’s (Kenneth Branagh) plan to end all life. He teams up with the charming Neil (Robert Pattinson, our villain’s wife (Elizabeth Debicki) and an Indian crime matriarch (Dimple Kapadia) in an attempt to stop Sator (Brannagh) from bringing about total ruin.

The story sounds simple enough. Now, add in a confusing time-travel element, countless story threads that seemingly lead nowhere and a mind-bending final battle that rivals the head-scratching brought about by Inception, and you have a trickier task on your hands. You are not merely watching a movie. You are landed slap bang in the middle of a story that is constantly looping and forced to solve riddles that the director plants in your lap. This is not for everyone and that is OK.

I don’t mean to sound like an asshole here, but I didn’t find this movie that hard to follow. The main storyline is pretty much explained to us throughout and the clues about different characters being more than they appear are blatant enough on the big screen. Now, if you asked me to explain the time-travel aspect of our show I wouldn’t have a clue where to begin, and there are some things that are left unexplained, but for the most part it is not too difficult to understand.

John David Washington is fantastic. He was brilliant in BlacKkKlansman and hilarious in Ballers, but this will be what he is remembered for in the years to come. He is calm, cool, suave and collected all while navigating his new journey in a scary world where the past is not necessarily safe. He has a brilliant chemistry with Robert Pattinson, who has outgrown his Twilight pigeonhole with hilarious interviews and fantastic performances in some brilliant films over the last couple of years (The King, Good Time, The Lighthouse). Both men are and will be in high demand.

Elizabeth Debicki is outstanding as the broken wife of a criminal. She switches from being the damsel in distress to the new, free woman she dreamed of imperceptibly.

Dimple Kapadia is someone that I had never heard of before but I am glad I do now. Driving the storyline along with her helping hints to the Protagonist, she was very good in the time she got on screen.

There is nothing new to say about Kenneth Branagh. He is our generation’s Laurence Olivier and Steve McQueen all rolled into one. He is convincing as the narcissistic and murderous Sator, intent on taking the world down with him.

As cinemas remain closed and more than likely will be over Christmas, why not order the DVD online or buy it in stores when they hopefully open in the run up to the festive season. You’ll be guaranteed an evening of head scratching and debating on the ending and endless foreshadowing you’ve witnessed!

Keep an eye on Oxygen.ie for more movie reviews each week and let me know if you agree!

TENET will arrive on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray™, DVD and Digital on 14th December, in time for Christmas.

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