Christopher Nolan is easily on the shortlist for the best directors of the 21st century, constantly delivering unparalleled cerebral thrills and often taking risks with bold sci-fi ideas. His latest film, an adaptation of Homer’s The Odyssey starring Matt Damon as Odysseus, is a hit, and we’re already wondering what his next project will be.
While we wait for Nolan’s next blockbuster, we’ve looked back at all his movies to date – and ranked them from our least to most favorite. With 13 films under his belt, Christopher Nolan has searched the far reaches of space, explored the forbidden depths of the mind, and brought Batman to the big screen in a way like no one else. Nolan’s toying with time and perception are his calling card, as are lofty ideas and applied physics used for storyline purposes.
So, from his first film, Following, to his most recent release, The Odyssey, we’ve ranked all director Christopher Nolan’s movies below.
13. Following (1999)
For a movie shot on weekends and without a steady supply of quality film stock, Nolan’s first feature is an effective character study hiding out in the trappings of a whodunit. Following tracks a young writer who stalks people on the streets of London for inspiration. When he is found out by a thief who takes him under his wing, the writer ends up on a path that doesn’t bode well by the time the film ends.
Following establishes Nolan’s fascination with the themes of identity and crime as a tool of manipulation; and yes, we even see the director flirt with a mostly successful attempt at the twist ending.
12. The Dark Knight Rises (2012)
Tom Hardy debuted as Bane and Anne Hathaway donned the Catwoman suit for this ridiculously anticipated finale to Christopher Nolan’s massively popular Dark Knight Trilogy. The Dark Knight Rises shot for the stars, with a larger scope than any Batman movie before it. While reactions were mixed to some of the choices in the movie, on a psychological level, The Dark Knight Rises shows the resolve of the Bruce Wayne character on screen like never before. We get to see him do what his father had always told him he could – learn to pick himself up – and save the city he loves.
11. Tenet (2020)
Tenet — which was first delayed by the pandemic and then released to theaters before the world was ready to head back outside — never quite got the presentation it needed (or that Nolan himself desired). On top of that, despite being a technical marvel, it was one of the director’s most emotionally cold efforts to date. That being said, this sci-fi spy thriller movie — starring John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, and Elizabeth Debicki — is an exciting globe-trotting treat for the senses, telling the story of a secret team trying to stop an attack on Earth’s present…from Earth’s future. You might not fully understand how reverse entropy works, or how it’s able to interact with regular entropy, but it’s a beautifully batsh*t thing to watch unfold on screen.
10. Insomnia (2002)
Based on a Norwegian thriller of the same name, Insomnia is firmly within noir territory — a troubled detective unravelling the murder of a young girl — but it purposefully inverts many of the inherited stylistic conventions. Since the action unfolds in a small fishing town in Alaska, where the sun never sets, Nolan’s ‘sunshine’ noir eschews shadows for blinding light.
The beauty of Insomnia, which stars Al Pacino, is that it never cheats or dumbs down its story, and it always keeps us on Pacino’s level, as his character tries to both do a good cop’s job and cover up his own misconduct and while fighting off the worst case of insomnia ever. Robin Williams delivers an unnerving performance as the murderer Pacino’s gunning for, and Hilary Swank adds more than what’s on the page with her turn as the local cop.


