With The Odyssey, Christopher Nolan Earns His Place as Hollywood's Great Liberal Humanist
It's not woke. It's a rousing analog epic about cracks in the liberal order.
It's not woke. It's a rousing analog epic about cracks in the liberal order.
An HBO series set in the Batman universe reminds us that when a substance is outlawed, the market will provide one way or another.
Companies make decisions all the time, some of them regrettable and unfortunate, that shouldn't be any of the government's business.
Ten years after its release, the final film of Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy is possibly even more relevant.
The movie's whole idea seems to be that if Batman truly wanted to make Gotham a better place, he'd find some other way to do it, perhaps involving politics.
It's a Batman movie that seems distinctly uncomfortable with the idea of Batman.
Gun control isn't the answer.
News outlets are rushing to speculative judgment about the accused Batman murderer
A surprisingly limp conclusion to Christopher Nolan's celebrated Batman trilogy.
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