6 Reasons Why Chris Nolan Should Direct Akira

5. He's No Stranger To The Themes

Akira is full of the types of themes that Nolan would froth over like a rabid dog with a milk moustache. Without diving into the entire, lengthy story of Akira, because carpel tunnel syndrome is no joke and I need my hands, there is an abundance of ideologies and themes in the phenomenal narrative that are perfectly in tune with Nolan€™s sensibilities. Akira contains self-deception, perpetrated by Tetsuo and equally explored in Nolan€™s Memento, The Prestige and Inception. There€™s the examination of the nature of heroism, shown in the growth of Kaneda and a large focus of Nolan€™s well-known trilogy about a man who dresses like a bat and sounds like he€™s got a three pack-a-day habit. Finally, Akira is both ominously pessimistic and equally optimistic, kind of like saying that the glass is half full. Of urine. Nolan€™s movies hold a similar sentiment. In The Dark Knight, Batman prevents the Joker from soiling Harvey Dent€™s name but becomes a scapegoat for his actions. The Dark Knight Rises shows the solemn sacrifice of a hero, only to reveal that said hero is in Italy, eating gelato and banging Anne Hathaway, leaving the protection of a city he abandoned to a guy with absolutely no training and resources who will most certainly end up with more holes than Bin Laden. I mean, there is no chance in hell that anyone would recognise a world famous billionaire who was recently reported as dead, right?
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When I was a kid, I used to think the moon followed our car everywhere.