10 Reasons Why Chris Nolan Should Stay Away From James Bond

9. The World Is Not Enough For Christopher Nolan

Inception For all their comparably €˜epic€™ status, Christopher Nolan€™s films sit at a structural right-angle to the Bond series in their sense of place. Whereas, as we all know, James Bond has harassed the better part of the world€™s population in his time, Nolan€™s films are fundamentally internal. Those jaunts to Hong Kong (The Dark Knight) or Mombassa (Inception) are mere sideshows and, in story terms, only perform minor narrative housekeeping (in both cases finding elusive characters€”they€™re a notional €œsomewhere far away€, which the location boys probably figure out based on the exchange rate). Nolan generally prefers architecture and construction, and perhaps the world-weariness of Bruce Wayne or Cobb is fundamentally incompatible with the glamour of an old-fashioned travelogue (€œHow I miss Marion Cotillard and my kids € but ooh look, does anyone else want to do a cruise across the Rhine?!€). However, travelogue remains an important part of the Bond series€™ appeal. Ian Fleming got angry letters when he confined the action of Moonraker (1955) to Kent€”and nearly fifty years later, audiences (especially those endlessly sun-craving Britons) could riot if Nolan has 007 follow Batman to Pittsburgh.
Contributor
Contributor

Hamish Crawford writes fiction more easily than fact. His first volume of short fiction, “A Madhouse, Only With More Elegant Jackets”, was published in 2011 from First Edition Publishing. He has an English degree from the University of Calgary and a Screenwriting M.A. from the University of Westminster, which leaves little space on the wall for his several PhD. rejection letters. His stories and articles have appeared in such publications as NoD and the Cult Britannia website (www.cultbritannia.co.uk). In September he will be speaking at a Doctor Who 50th anniversary conference in Hertfordsire. The owner of far more hats than heads, Hamish currently lives in Canada, and is disappointed that the preceding biography contains so few factual errors. Visit his website: http://hamish-crawford.weebly.com