Movies from Christopher Nolan

Dr. No

In the film that launched the James Bond saga, Agent 007 battles mysterious Dr. No, a scientific genius bent on destroying the U.S. space program. As the countdown to disaster begins, Bond must go to Jamaica, where he encounters beautiful Honey Ryder, to confront a megalomaniacal villain in his massive island headquarters.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
“I’ve loved the Bond films since I was a kid. For me, they’re always about the expansiveness of cinema. The first Bond films set up infinite possibilities about the world they create. I’d love to do a Bond film.”
Movies from Christopher Nolan

BlacKkKlansman

Colorado Springs, late 1970s. Ron Stallworth, an African American police officer, and Flip Zimmerman, his Jewish colleague, run an undercover operation to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
"It was an absolutely electric screening and felt very, very significant," Nolan says. "John David's performance and the way he carried that film, the way he centred that film, I was in the middle of writing the script at that point and ... it was very difficult for me to get him out of my head after that screening."
Movies from Christopher Nolan

The Spy Who Loved Me

Russian and British submarines with nuclear missiles on board both vanish from sight without a trace. England and Russia both blame each other as James Bond tries to solve the riddle of the disappearing ships. But the KGB also has an agent on the case.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
That ride takes the Protagonist (John David Washington) and the audience all around the world. It gives Tenet a true sense of escapism and this was something influenced by one of his favourite James Bond movies, The Spy Who Loved Me. "I try not to watch it too often, but when I watched it recently and showed it to my kids, you can tap back into those early experiences. I think I was about seven years old when I saw it, I went with my dad to the cinema to see it," he recalled.
Movies recommended by Christopher Nolan
30 movies

30 Favorite Movies from Christopher Nolan

An updated list of the best movies according to Christopher Nolan. Recently an award-winning director who is also known as 'genius' shared an ultimate list of the works of other directors he believes to be worthy. Check out Christopher Nolan's 30 favorite films!
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
An updated list of the best movies according to Christopher Nolan. Recently an award-winning director who is also known as 'genius' shared an ultimate list of the works of other directors he believes to be worthy. Check out Christopher Nolan's 30 favorite films!
Movies from Christopher Nolan

The Offence

A burned-out British police detective finally snaps while interrogating a suspected child molester.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
Have you seen "The Offence"? You gotta see "The Offence". Another one with Sean Connery, it is from this time period. It is incredible.
Movies from Christopher Nolan

The Hill

North Africa, World War II. British soldiers on the brink of collapse push beyond endurance to struggle up a brutal incline. It's not a military objective. It's The Hill, a manmade instrument of torture, a tower of sand seared by a white-hot sun. And the troops' tormentors are not the enemy, but their own comrades-at-arms.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
It's a great favorite of mine, but I can never find it anywhere.
Movies from Christopher Nolan

Boyhood

The film tells a story of a divorced couple trying to raise their young son. The story follows the boy for twelve years, from first grade at age 6 through 12th grade at age 17-18, and examines his relationship with his parents as he grows.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
The sense of your life passing you by and your kids growing up before your eyes. Very much what I felt watching Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, an extraordinary film, which is weirdly doing the same thing in a completely different way.
Books from Christopher Nolan

Selected Non-Fictions

It will come as a surprise to some readers that the greater part of Jorge Luis Borges's extraordinary writing was not in the genres of fiction or poetry, but in the various forms of non-fiction prose. His thousands of pages of essays, reviews, prologues, lectures, and notes on politics and culture--though revered in Latin America and Europe as among his finest work--have scarcely been translated into English. Selected Non-Fictions presents a Borges almost entirely unknown to American readers. Here is the dazzling metaphysician speculating on the nature of time and reality and the inventions of heaven and hell, and the almost superhumanly erudite reader of the world's literatures, from Homer to Ray Bradbury, James Joyce to Lady Murasaki. Here, too, the political Borges, taking courageous stands against fascism, anti-Semitism, and the Peron dictatorship; Borges the moive critic, on King Kong and Citizen Kane and the Borgesian art of dubbing; and Borges the regular columnist for the Argentine equivalent of the Ladies' Home Journal, writing hilarious book reviews and capsule biographies of modern writers. The first comprehensive selection of this work in any language, Selected Non-Fiction presents over 160 of these astonishing writings, from his youthful manifestos to his last meditations on his favorite books. More than a hundred of these pieces have never before appeared in English, and all have been rendered in brilliant new translations by Esther Allen, Suzanne Jill Levine, and Eliot Weinberger. This unique selection, the third and final volume in Penguin's centenary edition of the Collected Work in English, presents Borges as at once a deceptively self-effacing guide to the universe and the inventor of a universe that is an idispensable guide to Borges.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
What I'd like to take If I had to take 2 volumes, I would choose selected fictions and non-fictions of Jorge Luis Borges. It is the author that I admire greatly. (34 m 20 s)
Books from Christopher Nolan

Collected Fictions

The complete fiction of Jorge Luis Borges, whom Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa calls “the most important Spanish-language writer since Cervantes”A New York Times Notable BookThe International BestsellerFor the first time in English, all of the best Latin American writer Jorge Luis Borges's dazzling fictions are collected in a single volume in brilliant new translations by Andrew Hurley. From his 1935 debut with The Universal History of Iniquity through his immensely influential collections Ficciones and The Aleph, the enigmatic prose poems of The Maker, up to his final work in the 1980s, Shakespeare's Memory, these enigmatic, elaborate, imaginative inventions display Borges's talent for turning fiction on its head by playing with form and genre and toying with language.For some fifty years, in intriguing and ingenious fictions that reimagined the very form of the short story, Borges returned again and again to his celebrated themes: dreams, duels, labyrinths, mirrors, infinite libraries, the manipulations of chance, gauchos, knife fighters, tigers, and the elusive nature of identity itself. Playfully experimenting with ostensibly subliterary genres, Borges took the detective story and turned it into metaphysics; he took fantasy writing and made it, with its questioning and reinventing of everyday reality, central to the craft of fiction; he took the literary essay and put it to use reviewing wholly imaginary books.Commemorating the 100th anniversary of his birth, this edition at last brings together all of Borges's magical short stories. Collected Fictions is the definitive one-volume compendium for all those who have long loved Borges, and a superb introduction to the Argentine master's work for those who have yet to discover him.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
What I'd like to take If I had to take 2 volumes, I would choose selected fictions and non-fictions of Jorge Luis Borges. It is the author that I admire greatly. (34 m 20 s)
Books from Christopher Nolan

A Tale of Two Cities

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." Charles Dickens' classic novel tells the story of two Englishmen--degenerate lawyer Sydney Carton and aristocrat Charles Darnay--who fall in love with the same woman in the midst of the French Revolution's blood and terror. Originally published as 31 weekly instalments, A Tale of Two Cities has been adapted several times for film, serves as a rite of passage for many students, and is one of the most famous novels ever published.This is a free digital copy of a book that has been carefully scanned by Google as part of a project to make the world's books discoverable online. To make this print edition available as an ebook, we have extracted the text using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology and submitted it to a review process to ensure its accuracy and legibility across different screen sizes and devices. Google is proud to partner with libraries to make this book available to readers everywhere.
Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
I read the script and was a little baffled by a few things and realized that I’d never read A Tale of Two Cities. It was just one of those things that I thought I had done. Then I got it, read it and absolutely loved it and got completely what he was talking about… When I did my draft on the script, it was all about A Tale of Two Cities.
Music from Christopher Nolan

Prophecies

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
The last piece of music is from the film Koyaanisqatsi, and it's called Prophecies by Phillip Glass. The soundtrack and the film is entirely made of imagery and has no conventional narrative. (32 m 50 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Ski Chase - Remastered

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
The best movie scores they always leave a space for the imagery and I think John Barry is just one of the great composers. (29 m 45 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Loving the Alien

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
Trying to choose one David Bowie song to take with you is very very difficult. David Bowie's personas were so different, when you discovered was like "who is your Doctor Who? or who is your James Bond?". For me, it was David Bowie of "Let's Dance" or his "Pop Star" era, that I had the most nostalgic attachment to and Loving the Alien comes of the album "Tonight" which is his follow up to "Let's Dance." (21 m 10 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Five Circles

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
It's a remarkable film score, because it is done in a very futuristic way. It is in a way nostalgia, nostalgia for a future. It is an interesting concept. (17 m 50 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Mozart & Schubert: Works for Piano Duo (Expanded Edition)

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
Schubert's Fantasia for Piano Duet, my father was obsessed with music, he played this for a friend of his some years ago, before he died. The thing that I remember about it is hearing two talented amateurs playing this as a very strong theme and the parts wandered off in the different places and then come back for the theme. (13 m 35 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Paranoid Android

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
This track is one of my favorites. It's Radiohead. It came out in 1997, it was important time in my life. ( 9 m 18 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Journey to the Line

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
Hanz is a composer I work with a lot, and this is one of his best film scores. It is from Terrence Malick's Thin Red Line. It's a carefully structured, minimalist piece of composition. It has a wonderful ability to make whatever images that are in the scene more vital. ( 04 m 50 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Blade Runner - End Titles

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
I love the music to Blade Runner. I'm a big movie score fan and David and I loved what Vangelis done for Blade Runner here with synthesizer, I think it is really extraordinary. (16 m 28 s)
Music from Christopher Nolan

Something in the Air

Christopher Nolan
Director, Producer, Screenwriter
It was more about the particular feeling on the way it came in. I just loved it. (12 m 45 s)