Director Christopher Nolan has addressed the surprise surrounding the contemporary language in his upcoming epic, The Odyssey. Trailers revealed characters speaking modern English with American accents, leading to reactions on social media. Now, the filmmaker has explained his creative reasoning, admitting the choice might be a risk.
Christopher Nolan discusses the creative thinking behind The Odyssey’s dialogue
Nolan made a firm break from tradition while writing the screenplay for his Homeric adaptation. He stripped away formal verse and scholarly translations, replacing them with words that hit the gut rather than the brain.
“I wanted an earthy narrative. To me it was a no-brainer,” Nolan told the LA Times. He sought language carrying “emotional not intellectual meaning.” That mission spawned The Odyssey’s trailer moments where characters shout “Let’s go!” and drop words like “Daddy” into an 8th-century BC setting.
The filmmaker fully grasps the backlash potential. “I was maybe being naïve, it might bite me on the a**,” he admitted. Yet he stands firm on prioritizing visceral connection over historical accuracy. That same philosophy shaped his casting grid.
This pursuit of accessibility extends to The Odyssey’s massive cast. Christopher Nolan assembled an ensemble of recognizable stars, including Matt Damon, Zendaya, Tom Holland, Robert Pattinson, Anne Hathaway, and more. The director believes famous faces serve a purpose similar to the language. His characters “are mythological figures, iconic in some ways,” so “I wanted to cast it big, get the finest bunch of actors” to help contemporary audiences feel immediately at home in the ancient world.
Nolan has already parried blows from other online skirmishes. Critics mocked armor designs resembling Batman’s Batsuit. Nolan fired back with a history lesson for Time magazine, pointing to Mycenaean daggers forged from blackened bronze. He detailed how ancient metalworkers likely added gold, silver, and sulfur to achieve the darkened finish. Travis Scott’s appearance as a bard also raised eyebrows. Nolan offered a straightforward defense: oral poetry traditions that birthed Homer’s epic share DNA with modern rap music.
So fans can immerse themselves in Nolan’s version of Homer’s epic when The Odyssey releases in theaters on July 17.
