Seat of the problem: why does Christopher Nolan hate chairs?

Still, stiff-legged, sat-upon … chairs set a bad, undynamic example, which is why the movie director won’t let his actors near one

We still don’t know all that much about Christopher Nolan’s upcoming Tenet. We know the stars, and that things appear to go backwards in it, but that’s about the extent of it. We don’t have a plot. We don’t have a runtime. We don’t even have a concrete release date yet. But if I had to bet money on anything, it’s that the primary antagonist of Tenet will be some sort of chair.

Because Christopher Nolan hates chairs. He hates them. And if you have ever sat in a chair, chances are he hates you too. You look at a chair and see something comfortable. But Christopher Nolan? He looks at a chair and sees an instrument of the unforgivably weak.

This previously unseen chair-hating side of Christopher Nolan’s personality has finally come to light, thanks to a Zoom call between Anne Hathaway and Hugh Jackman. “Chris also doesn’t allow chairs,” Hathaway told Jackman. “I worked with him twice. He doesn’t allow chairs, and his reasoning is, if you have chairs, people will sit, and if they’re sitting, they’re not working”.

In fairness, this is a completely watertight rationale. By any metric going, sitting down is for wimps. Think about any hero you like, and I guarantee they’ve didn’t so much as graze a cushion with their bottom. Winston Churchill never sat down for a single second in his entire life. King Henry VIII famously wouldn’t even lie down, preferring to spend his nights propped upwards inside an elaborate mechanical spine-augmentation device. Captain Tom Moore raised £23m by walking laps around his garden. Do you know how much he would have raised if he’d chickened out and boinged around the garden on an inflatable spacehopper instead? Nothing, that’s how much.

Sure, this anti-chair revelation might seem quite cruel at first – given that 90% of time on any film set is spent listlessly waiting around for someone else to finish their job – but it must be said that it has been hiding in plain sight. Remember the interrogation scene in The Dark Knight? The Joker sits down in that, and gets his head smashed in as punishment. Ever wondered why all those extras on the mole in Dunkirk looked so weary? It’s because their lumbars were all screaming in agony. And any other director would have given Batman a motorbike with a proper seat. Not Christopher Nolan. To see Batman sitting on his bottom on a motorbike would be to see Batman experiencing a modicum of comfort, and therefore not reaching his full potential. That’s why Christopher Nolan made Batman ride around on a ridiculously unwieldy bike that requires you to sort of awkwardly lie on your stomach and genitals.

However, this isn’t to say that Christopher Nolan isn’t against loopholes. He might hate chairs with an intensity that borders on the psychopathic, but go and Google photos of him directing Dunkirk. He spent an awful lot of time in a wetsuit, bobbing up and down in the English channel. Don’t get him wrong, chairs are absolutely for idiots. But circumventing the need for chairs by utilising a large body of salinated water for its inherent buoyancy properties? Now that’s a sign of real graft.

Christopher Nolan is a director at the top of his game. If he hates chairs, then we should all hate chairs too. That goes for anyone planning to watch Tenet in a cinema. Eat your popcorn standing up, you cowards. A film isn’t a film unless your whole body aches as you watch it.



Contributor

Stuart Heritage

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Tenet up: listen, Christopher Nolan, we just can't hear a word you're saying
The Tenet director has dismissed critics of his poor sound mixing by blaming us for being too conservative. Why must he keep toying with our perception of sound?

Stuart Heritage

16, Nov, 2020 @2:56 PM

Article image
Mark Kermode on… director Christopher Nolan, a magician of cinema as memory
From Memento to the Golden Globe-winning Oppenheimer, the head-scrambling British-American director has revelled in using cinema as a time machine – and a conjuring trick

Mark Kermode

13, Jan, 2024 @8:00 AM

Article image
From Memento to Interstellar: our writers pick their favourite Christopher Nolan films
With the much-anticipated staggered release of Tenet, writers argue why each of Christopher Nolan’s 10 previous films should be seen as his best

Beatrice Loayza, Peter Bradshaw, Benjamin Lee, Wendy Ide, Charles Bramesco, Radheyan Simonpillai, Adrian Horton, Noah Gittell, Jordan Hoffman and Steve Rose

27, Aug, 2020 @6:24 AM

Article image
Anne Hathaway deserves Catwoman spin-off, says Christopher Nolan
Director claims her Dark Knight Rises performance will leave audiences wanting more, saying she is 'an incredible character'

Ben Child

12, Jul, 2012 @10:50 AM

Article image
Christopher Nolan leads industry fury over Warner Bros' streaming move
Tenet director says studio’s decision to release its entire 2021 slate in the US simultaneously in cinemas and on HBO Max is ‘not how you treat film-makers’

Andrew Pulver

08, Dec, 2020 @1:10 PM

Article image
Christopher Nolan and Sofia Coppola urge fans to watch films in cinemas, not on Netflix
As studios reckon with the rise of streaming, the two directors ask audiences to watch their movies on the big screen, where they’re ‘meant to be seen’

Gwilym Mumford

30, Mar, 2017 @10:18 AM

Article image
Warner Bros delays release of Christopher Nolan's Tenet again
The big budget sci-fi thriller, originally scheduled for July, has no new release date due to uncertainty over US cinemas reopening

Andrew Pulver

21, Jul, 2020 @12:15 PM

Article image
Hard to pardon: why Tenet's muffled dialogue is a very modern problem
Christopher Nolan’s latest blockbuster is already infamous for its barely audible exchanges. As sound technology advances, why are films getting harder to hear?

Ralph Jones

03, Sep, 2020 @10:30 AM

Article image
Christopher Nolan always did seem like a stand-up guy | David Mitchell
Anne Hathaway’s revelation that the director bans chairs on set to keep actors on their feet made me need a sit-down

David Mitchell

05, Jul, 2020 @9:00 AM

Article image
Christopher Nolan and The Dark Knight Rises cast: 'Gotham has become a cynical place' - video

Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard and Christopher Nolan talk to Catherine Shoard about the final chapter in Nolan's Batman trilogy. In these interviews - filmed before the tragic shootings in Colorado - the cast describe how Nolan's script reflects the real-world's economic inbalance and explain why we can still side with Batman, even though he's a multi-billionaire

Catherine Shoard and Henry Barnes

23, Jul, 2012 @12:25 PM