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And yet, underneath all that pomp and spectacle, there is a narrative truth that is already clear from the first trailers for The Odyssey: the film will carry on one of the most prominent themes that runs through so many Nolan films.
Absent Fathers Are A Major Theme In Chris Nolan Movies

Have you ever noticed it before? So many of Christopher Nolan’s movies come with the plot point and theme of absent or compromised fathers, and the mix of trauma and/or legacy that is inherited by their children.
You can trace this motif back as far as Nolan’s independent feature film, Following (1998), and his remake of the Norwegian film Insomnia (2002). The former saw a young man fall under the wing of a criminal mentor (a spin on a father-figure), while the latter had Al Pacino’s protagonist cop being a corrupted mentor/father-figure to Hilary Swank’s younger cop. The theme would become far more literal in the next phase of Nolan’s career, with Batman Begins (2005), The Prestige (2006), and Inception (2010) all having clear signs of middle-aged angst over parents dying, and/or failing to be there to provide guidance and care to their children. That angst only seemed to grow with Man of Steel (2013) and Interstellar (2014), both of which contain entire subplots about the emotional trauma and existential turmoil of children who lose their parents, particularly their fathers.









