Director Christopher Nolanās āmythic action epicā, based on The Odyssey, is reportedly due to go into production in January ā and will wrap in March.
The rumours over the film director Christopher Nolan would make after Oppenheimer turned out to be quite spectacularly wide of the mark. Itāll be a vampire horror, the whispers suggested. No, itāll be a tech thriller along the lines of 1980s helicopter film (and short-lived TV series) Blue Thunder, another report burbled.
Instead, itās been revealed that Nolan is adapting Homerās epic poem, The Odyssey, with Universal Pictures announcing in a social media post that itāll be āa mythic action epic shot across the world.ā
The film is currently scheduled for a summer 2026 release, which means Nolan and his collaborators will have to move fairly quickly to meet that deadline. It makes sense, then, that the film is said to be going into production this month ā thatās January 2025 if youāre reading this in the future. Production Weekly (via World Of Reel) has Nolanās Odyssey adaptation scheduled for a four month shoot, with locations including the UK, Morocco and Italy; filming is scheduled to wrap in April 2025.
Among the cast assembled so far youāll find Tom Holland, Zendaya, Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, Robert Pattinson, Lupita Nyongāo and Charlize Theron. Who exactly theyāll be playing hasnāt been disclosed, but then again, details about Nolanās latest film are rather scant in general. Itās currently unknown, for example, whether itāll be a straight period adaptation ā placing it in Ancient Greece ā or a more contemporary spin like the Coen brothersā O Brother, Where Art Thou.
Given the interest in Nolanās films, more details are bound to emerge as the shoot begins, however; if set photos show the likes of Tom Holland and Robert Pattinson clad in fake beards and loin cloths, then weāll have a better idea of what kind of adaptation the acclaimed filmmaker is going for.
If those set photos also show, say, Zendaya dressed as a vampire and Charlize Theron driving around in a futuristic helicopter, then we could be in for one of the most exciting renditions of a Greek poem ever seen on the big screen. We can but hope.
The Odyssey is due for release in cinemas on the 17th July 2026.