10 Movie Openings You're Not Supposed To Understand

10. Tenet

Christopher Nolan's most recent film Tenet is ambitious, visually stunning, well acted, and far more confusing than you'd expect even one of Nolan's heady sci-fi action flicks to be.

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The reason for this? Nolan's "impressionistic" sound design employed throughout, whereby dialogue - often even important, expository verbiage - is regularly drowned out by environmental sound effects, as left many viewers frustrated upon release.

Nolan's obfuscatory approach is made evident from an otherwise thrilling opening sequence in which The Protagonist (John David Washington) takes part in an extraction operation at the Kyiv Opera House.

We're thrown headlong into the action, for one, but even when the Protagonist and other characters do speak, the sound mixing gives such little priority to the dialogue that it's regularly difficult to hear what's being said.

It certainly doesn't help that the Protagonist is wearing a speech-muffling gas mask for the most of the scene, such that many audience members failed to hear the Protagonist tells his mark a crucial bit of contextual information: "You've been made. This siege is a blind for them to vanish you."

As a result, many were left exhilarated yet somewhat frustrated by Nolan's insistent desire to preface experiential sound over sound that actually keeps the audience abreast of what's going on.

And so, as much as Nolan bangs the drum for the sanctity of the theatrical experience, some felt they had an easier time following the whole movie when watching with subtitles at home.

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