Nolan’s films have always been a bit niche(Batman excepted). Regular people don’t go to the movies to feel conflicted or depressed. Barbie seems to be more targeted towards a general audience, it’s more positive(at least on the surface), features actors and IP people recognize, and seems to have tapped into the zeitgeist. Regardless, 40M opening weekend is still pretty good. So don’t think of it as a competition, think of it as two auteur films succeeding, which is awesome for all fans of theaters!
[–]Korne1271 points1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
Nolan’s films have always been a bit niche
What? I genuinely really can't relate. I mean, for me personally Nolan is what cinema is supposed to be like, it's epicness, the grandness, etc. But he's highly successful, just look at Inception, Interstellar, Batman, and also Dunkirk and Memento to a lesser degree. Like I would say he's one of the most mainstream / successful movie people.
Damn, I really wouldn't have thought that Oppenheimer got so much less in comparison, to be honest, less at all…
Nolan’s films have always been a bit niche(Batman excepted). Regular people don’t go to the movies to feel conflicted or depressed. Barbie seems to be more targeted towards a general audience, it’s more positive(at least on the surface), features actors and IP people recognize, and seems to have tapped into the zeitgeist. Regardless, 40M opening weekend is still pretty good. So don’t think of it as a competition, think of it as two auteur films succeeding, which is awesome for all fans of theaters!
What? I genuinely really can't relate. I mean, for me personally Nolan is what cinema is supposed to be like, it's epicness, the grandness, etc. But he's highly successful, just look at Inception, Interstellar, Batman, and also Dunkirk and Memento to a lesser degree. Like I would say he's one of the most mainstream / successful movie people.