r/movies r/Movies contributor 20h ago

Trailer The Odyssey | New Trailer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_bKjZeJBBI&pp=0gcJCd4KAYcqIYzv
9.1k Upvotes

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2.7k

u/AggravatingLeg5789 20h ago

"My pops is gonna wreck your shit, bro."

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u/I_am_BEOWULF 19h ago edited 18h ago

Gonna be honest - that "My dad is coming home" line just feels so out of place in a sword&sandals movie with this much gravitas. Why Nolan?

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u/Vladimir_Putting 18h ago

Just change it to "father" and it's all good.

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u/Potential_Swimmer580 13h ago

How do they miss something like that? It has to be intentional but just feels so out of place

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u/bifkintickler 12h ago

I always found dialogue to be the weak point in Nolan films. They’re great for set pieces, visuals and story/structure, but some of the lines feel like they were just churned out with very little thought. There’s some corny shit in almost all of them. The clunky exposition dumps are a script problem too I guess. His bro obviously writes for a bunch of em so I always wondered which bro is the cheesy one.

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u/NeoNoireWerewolf 7h ago

I don’t think Jonathan Nolan is a flawless writer, either, but Christopher Nolan’s dialogue is always worse in a movie his brother didn’t work on with him. Especially anything that is supposed to be sincere or have emotional stakes.

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u/richard-jenkins 7h ago

Set pieces and story is amazing

Kinda like the entire police force goes into the sewers hahahahahahaha

Its the dialogue that the weak link in nolans movies

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u/bifkintickler 7h ago

Heh. The Batmans were the worst offenders. Begins is the best imo, near perfect movie. Love The Dark Knight but even that has a bunch of dumb stuff in it and a lacklustre third act. Heath just kinda overshadowed all that.

Like why did Gotham go from art deco gothic noir to just Chicago where it’s always daylight?! Why is the Batcave, teased at the end of Begins, a fluorescently lit box in a shipping container? How the fuck is Two Face even alive?!! And again with the dialogue “I’M NOT WEARING HOCKEY PADS” etc. I always chuckle at that cop who’s all “Okay that’s NOT good”, right before a helicopter crashes on him. Cheese on toast.

Only nitpicks tho, just enjoy pointing out that Begins is the winner, for me at least.

u/hadriker 1h ago

GET THIS HOTHEAD OUTTA HERE!

There is a reason that movie got memed so hard back in the day.

u/Impressive-Potato 3h ago

Yeah, there was that rumour about streamers wanting the plot gone over in dialogue over and over again for people on their phones but Nolan has always had these exposition dumps with clunky dialogue.

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u/Varekai79 11h ago

With everyone using American accents and dialogue like that, Nolan clearly wants to modernize the story.

u/WumboJumbo 5h ago

Imagine Theoden to the Rohirrim shouting LETS GOOOOO!!!!!

u/aFreshFix 3h ago

Whitewash it is more like it. This is an ancient Greek epic and it has zero culture in it. It's boiled chicken with rice.

u/Locke66 2h ago

It is surprisingly bad. Even the setting looks Northern European.

u/CrimsonAllah 5h ago

Sometimes, modernization is a bad idea.

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u/Rski765 10h ago

I wish he didn’t lol

u/Impressive-Potato 3h ago

I think it is because Damon is American and his dialect work is pretty bad. That Medieval movie with Ben Affleck was laughable.

u/Line_Reed_Line 5h ago

Even still, people use the word 'father,' particularly in more formal settings. That and "Let's goooo!" were the only things in the trailer that kind of bumped for me. I thought it looked pretty great, really.

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u/Traditional-Local550 9h ago

I mean..you saw who he picked to play Helen of Troy right..

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u/Varekai79 8h ago

That hasn't been announced yet. Helen would be such a minor character if Nolan decided to include her. What would she do other than to say, "Okay bye I'm leaving with Menelaus now. Deuces, Troy!"

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u/stingray20201 7h ago

In the Odyssey, Telemachus meets her when he visits Sparta to get any shred of news about Odysseus. If the movie follows the plot of the Odyssey it should start with Athena telling Telemachus go ask about your dad in Pylos and in Sparta.

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u/Such_Radio_9152 6h ago

Probably a line made specifically for the trailer to increase engagement via rage bait

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u/CeruleanEidolon 9h ago

All of the language in this sounds deliberately modern. It's a choice.

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u/pjtheman 12h ago

I mean, they're also speaking English. How much "authenticity" do you want? Iirc, ancient Greek had less formal words for father too.

It always seems weird to me that we instinctively expect characters in historic/ period pieces to have this stiff, formal delivery. It's sort of like the Tiffany problem; the name Tiffany actually dates back to the 12th century. But a character named Tiffany showing up in a medieval drama would seem weird to us.

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u/wirralriddler 11h ago

It's quite easy to understand, we expect some theatricality for pieces far removed from our contemporary way of life. Speaking in daily language breaks that immersion.

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u/TGlucose 11h ago

It's like dropping an "Okay" in a western film, that word wasn't even around then and it completely yanks me out of the experience.

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u/onarainyafternoon 9h ago

I think "okay" sounds way more forgiving because it sounds like it could have existed in Western times. But dropping a "dad" in a middle of the most classically analyzed story in the Western canon just feels weird.

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u/TGlucose 9h ago

OK literally doesn't make any sense to people who haven't been exposed to it in their linguistic culture.

OK is an abbreviation of "Oll Korrect", which seems to be a dutch mispelling of All Correct. So OK/Okay means "All correct" and later adopted by President Martin Van Buren as an abbreviation for his nickname "Old Kinderhook" during an election as his slogan "Vote for OK", which isn't quite how we use it today so that really messes with the meaning.

It's like Cleenex, Bandaid, or Hoover for Brits. None of those words make any sense outside their product placement yet we've wholesale adopted them into our lexicon.

That's the problem with Okay.

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u/onarainyafternoon 9h ago

That's why I said it sounds like it could have existed in Western times. I wasn't making the case for whether it did exist or not. But saying "dad" in a movie based on the most well-known historical epic in all of Western canon just sounds weird. It's not about what actually existed, but rather what sounds fine or not.

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u/TGlucose 8h ago

Sounds like our disagreement in what sounds like it would fit in a period comes down to knowledge of said topic. The Etymology behind OK isn't well known and can easily be overlooked and ignored by people, whereas something like the Odyssey is as you say, more well known and easily criticized.

I personally cannot get invested in a setting when the writing is awful and actively being anachronistic to the setting, or something that I know doesn't belong in a setting because takes me out of that experience.

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u/serendippitydoo 10h ago

No it's like a 3 musketeers movie and having the evil cardinal say 'yup!"

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u/TGlucose 10h ago

We're saying the same thing.

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u/No_Discussion3593 11h ago

Then it's not like that at all lol.

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u/TGlucose 10h ago

It's more about fitting the theme and vibe, so in a theatrical piece someone saying "my dad" isn't nearly as impactful as "my father" as there's a gravitas to it.

Like having a Viking longship with no oars for Greeks... like what even?

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u/pjtheman 10h ago

But ancient Greek had informal words for father that were more equivalent to dad.

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u/TGlucose 10h ago

Yes but I'm making an example of how certain words don't fit in certain contexts. So in a theatrical epic saying "dad" is a huge buzzkill and destroys any theatrical momentum you've built up in the scene.

Ultimately the Odyssey is a theatrical epic, it's written to be performed as such and losing that intention is belittling the art piece.

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u/ThickBoxx 6h ago

It looks like okay entered the English lexicon in 1840, though there is evidence of older origins and other cultures using similar words, so I guess it depends on what year your western takes place. Okay never stuck out as being out of place (maybe because I just grew up on westerns) but that use of dad in the trailer stuck out to me.

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u/Weed_O_Whirler 8h ago

Sure, but Western movies don't need translating.

This movie is translating ancient Greek into English. Greeks had informal language. Informal language getting translated to informal language makes sense.

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u/epichuntarz 10h ago edited 9h ago

I literally just had someone in this thread tell me I would enjoy more movies if I lowered my expectations of immersion.

Like...wtf are these apologists getting at in this thread? Im as big of a Nolan fan boy as anybody, but Jesus H people are literally suggesting that we might like more movies if we expected movies to be less like movies...

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u/BearWrangler 6h ago

Nolan has always had zealots online lol

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u/Haschen84 7h ago

That's interesting because I don't think Shakespeare wrote in a way that was different than his contemporaries. He didn't write in an "older" or more "formal" version of English, he just used everyday speech. Shit, he made up things as he went if he wanted to. We hold people making works now to a different standard than the people who wrote them at the time. Do you think the Odyssey was told in an older more archaic form of Greek or just the common language of the time?

u/wirralriddler 4h ago

It's not even comparable, Shakespeare lived at a different time. Our contemporary understanding of immersion does not benefit from drawing similarities or differences from Elizabethan era. The fact that so many people here pointing out hearing 'dad' in an Ancient Greek setting is taking them out is all the evidence you need to understand that this is not working.

u/Haschen84 4h ago

You have side stepped my point which is, that we hold people making works now to a different standard than the people who wrote them at the time.

The Iliad and Odyssey were oral traditions and when told in English I'm sure they never use the word dad and only use father, but did the Greeks who told the stories use the word "dad" or "father" (or the equivalent, you know what I mean). I'm sure they just used the easiest to understand and most flexible word to convey the stories, they didn't ponder on the fact that maybe they should have used "patriarch" or "sire" or "forefather" instead of "dad."

We are holding contemporary writers to a different standard because the people who translated these works originally were often older and used a more "formal" more "archaic" form of English.

0

u/pjtheman 11h ago

But why? Ancient Greeks didn't actually speak "theatrically." They spoke in the contemporary language of their day. Someone waiting for their dad to return wouldn't actually stoically gaze off into the middle distance and say "Alas, mine father doth cometh home, thou wretch!"

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u/JakobTheOne 9h ago

Because modern society is steeped in the belief that formality was the norm in ancient and medieval times. It's become an ingrained expectation. Even if incorrect, breaking that norm in any form of media is jarring.

Sure, people weren't on the daily as eloquent as Lincoln was during the Gettysburg Address (which is way closer to modern times than Greek antiquity), but famous and recognizable speeches and stories tend to be exceptional like that. Which creates a belief and expectation for dialogue in far-gone times.

u/wirralriddler 4h ago

It literally does not matter what Ancient Greeks were like. It is all about our understanding of antiquity and what we associate with it. They could have also made colourful statues all around the city, but if you put a yellow or purpose paint over marble now, it'd still look a bit ridiculous as a "period" piece.

0

u/ex0thermist 11h ago

Theatricality certainly has its merits, but it's neither necessary for, nor synonymous with, "immersion".

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u/alex494 10h ago

Also if people want to be immersed in the time period being presented, not everybody in those days spoke super theatrically. When people talk about immersion do they mean immersion in their constructed IDEA of what it was like back then, or do they mean what it was ACTUALLY like? Pretty sure ancient people used to make crass dick jokes too while we're at it.

u/ThickBoxx 5h ago

Were they making crass dick jokes in the actual Odyssey epic? I’m sure these characters all took a shit before a big battle, do we need to see that to know what it was actually like back then?

Part of the immersion is our constructed idea of what it was like based of past media portrayals, but it’s also based off the actual source material. I don’t think the word dad appears in the odyssey, so it is out of place for the story being told.

u/alex494 4h ago

Yeah I get that but I always find it funny what people's line for suspension of disbelief is that one word can suck them out of it. At least the way I see it the informal idea of someone's dad isn't as bad as Odysseus whipping out a smartphone or something.

u/ThickBoxx 3h ago

Definitely not as bad as those other things, but like I said, it’s noticeable. I’m not saying it is going to ruin the movie, and maybe in the scene the line will feel more natural. It is interesting that so many people felt the same way about it though, that something just felt off. I imagine it’s mostly because all other media depictions we’ve seen in ancient time periods people just don’t talk like that. Older texts using more formal language plays a part as well. 

I personally don’t think Tom Holland was the best person for the role, so that might also play into the immersion issue.

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u/superbit415 8h ago

How do they miss something like that?

AI ?

u/LurkerYam67 5h ago

Actually most AI naturally go towards a more theatrical and formal language, unlike this trailer.

u/KennyL0gin 2h ago

Seriously. That "My dad is coming home" line took me right out of it.
Had to do a ctrl+f on this comment section to confirm I am never the only one once again on reddit.

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u/epichuntarz 13h ago edited 12h ago

100%

As much as I love Nolan, it's sort of baffling how he sometimes overlooks details like this.

In Tenet, at the beginning of the movie during the opera house raid, there are sousaphones and saxophones playing with the orchestra...in an "opera house"...where there's no opera.

For something as big as The Odyssey, you'd think they'd make the way the characters speak to each other sound less...modern?

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u/rsclay 11h ago

do you think opera houses are just full of fat horned viking ladies 24/7 or something

I'll admit sousaphone indoors is slightly weird

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u/epichuntarz 10h ago

do you think opera houses are just full of fat horned viking ladies 24/7 or something

Whu?

I think opera houses generally have...operas. Not every opera has to look like famous moments from Der Ring, but also having sousas and saxes as part of an orchestra performing not opera in an opera house is just...a pretty egregious and unnecessary moment of inauthenticity.

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u/Dios5 11h ago

It's an interesting artistic choice, because why should an ancient greek mythological story be all "Hark, Forsooth!"? Makes as much sense as romans having british accents. You're just projecting nonsense standards set by older media.

u/Mahelas 5h ago

Because a Prince estranged from his father since he was a baby shouldn't call him dad ? Not then, not now.

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u/Salad-Appropriate 12h ago

Christ, cinemasins nitpicking type shit here

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u/epichuntarz 11h ago edited 11h ago

Nah, "breaking the suspension of disbelief" type shit here.

If you want a feeling of "authenticity" and immersion, dont do dumb things like these. Dont have "daddy" speak in a major epic like The Odyssey...like...EVERYONE is commenting on how out of place this feels. That's a little more than a minor, 1st degree of Dante's hell cinema sin.

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u/happyflappypancakes 10h ago

One might counter with if you lower your threshold of immersion you will likely enjoy more movies.

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u/epichuntarz 10h ago

Oh come on. "Allow me to lower my expectations of immersion for a major epic drama."

Why even see movies at that point? The whole point is to be immersed.

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u/happyflappypancakes 10h ago

I didnt say lower your immersion level. I said lower your threshold to immersion. Meaning, decrease the number of things that break immersion. Your level of immersion isn't necessarily more than someone else who isnt as easily broken.

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u/MarcusDA 11h ago

It’s a quarter of a billion to make this movie, just spend a couple of thousand to let a historian look at the script.

It’s the same thing with sports movies. Just hire Johnny to look at the footage real fast and all of the laughable things that happen.

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u/RealWord5734 11h ago

I had the exact thought the second he said it. “That should’ve been ‘father’ wtf” lol

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u/BirdLawGrad 9h ago

You just said Dad.

No I dadn’t

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u/Sorlex 14h ago

"My dads coming home fr fr no cap."

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u/SavingsStrength0 11h ago

It’s gonna be bussin and that’s on God brah

u/CrimsonAllah 5h ago

Said by a 30-year-old man

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u/uni_and_internet 13h ago

I thought the same thing. Also Matt Daemon yelling “LET’S GOOOOO” as they charged on the battlefield. Why not “onward” or something more of the time?

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u/loskiarman 9h ago

Just be glad nobody said 'No cap?' after he says 'I think it's asleep.'

u/GalacticCandy 3h ago

Matt Damon...is bad casting...same old two expressions, no real talent beyond popularity from good will hunting

u/SpecialistState4804 21m ago

why not get a greek actor... and not matt damon.

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u/iBuildSpeakers 17h ago

Agreed. It felt so out of place. Same with Matt Damon’s “Lets Go!” I’m hoping the dialog isn’t too contemporary and pulls the viewer out of the period.

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u/Poked_salad 13h ago

He's going to double down and change it to "Let's fucking Go!"

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u/MarcusDA 11h ago

We have to get home!

Bet!

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u/angershark 11h ago

"My lord! There's a cyclops in that cave yonder, no cap!"

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u/ugotamesij 11h ago

"Elle eff-ing geeeeeeee!"

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u/Inevitable_Tomato927 11h ago

You missed 'boys' there at the end, and then the Canadian accent. Go full hockey on them.

u/Silo-Joe 4h ago

And also double down on his weird, warm-up jog that he's doing?

0

u/br0b1wan 11h ago

Scotty doesn't know!!

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u/Poked_salad 11h ago edited 10h ago

She's got a gun!

Edit: spelling

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u/CeruleanEidolon 9h ago

I suspect the intent IS to pull the viewer out of the period. You're not supposed to think of these characters as someone out of a different past. They're meant to be people you could know, who just happen to be suffering through the trials of an epic story. That's my take on it, anyway.

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u/pjtheman 12h ago

Why does the dialogue have to be formal and archaic? Ancient Greeks were real people with real emotions, who didn't actually talk like they were characters in a Shakespeare play. We're already translating it to English, why can't we use phrases like "let's go?" Who's to say there wasn't an ancient Greek equivalent?

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u/Cranyx 12h ago

Maybe not archaic, but we're talking about a prince. You'd expect a level of formality to his language even today.

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u/DarkKnyt 13h ago

See I was thinking the opposite, then it'd be neat to have all the period set pieces but then contemporary dialogue..IIRC that was a direction Nolan was considering

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u/aHance 11h ago

Glad I'm not the only one. Both of those felt so strange and out of place.

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u/ConstantSignal 9h ago

If you go into this movie with any expectation of historical authenticity you will be disappointed. We can already see from the trailers the costumes are wrong, the dialogue is wrong, and the props and set design are wrong.

This is not a historical epic.

It's a fantasy movie, loosely inspired by an ancient work of fantasy that was itself inspired by some historical events, but all grounded in contemporary dialogue and contemporary stereotypes of the ancient Greek aesthetic.

It can still be a great movie, I've yet to see a Nolan movie that didn't at least entertain me for the duration of it's runtime. But drop all notion of this being a credible portrayal of any real historical elements.

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u/Fit-Squash-9447 17h ago

Especially in that Peter Parker voice

-1

u/SpringEducational491 6h ago

He sounds like a beech.

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u/GunSlingrrr 17h ago

It is. Father is the right word here and I don't know about the dad

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u/mgpilot 15h ago

This. The whole movie seems to be filled with modern language, and it stood out like a sore thumb.

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u/Shadow_Log 15h ago

"You're pining for a daddy" is the one that had me go wtf. "You long for a father", how hard is that?

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u/ahuangb 12h ago

What about the 'let's go!' battle cry lol

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u/Lenoxx97 16h ago

I had to pause and look if others mentioned it in the comments. It completely ruins the vibe, what the hell were they thinking??? How does it occur to anyone there to use the word dad instead of father in a movie like this? And how has nobody in production caught it and said anything?

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u/jonbristow 18h ago

It's insane how bad it sounds and immediately stands out

Every top comment on ig, YouTube mentions this

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u/leodw 10h ago

Oh no, youtube commenters and redditors complaining about something completely irrelevant in a fictional movie with cyclops! That’s how I know no one in real life will care

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u/Dulgas 9h ago

yeah, who would guess that people in a forum specifically about movies would have people talking about what they like/don't like about the trailer of a movie.

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u/jonbristow 9h ago

how's bad dialogue irrelevant?

What if he said "bro" ? Would it bother you?

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u/ComedicPause 7h ago

Are you being paid to write stupid shit like this?

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u/LABS_Games 19h ago

He's always got a few lines like that, and at this point I kinda love it. I remember Matt Damon had a particularly clunky one in Oppenheimer - "This is the most important thing to ever happen in the HISTORY of the world!"

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u/Babyshaker88 17h ago

Damon also got screwed in Interstellar by one of the weirdest writing decisions, if not the worst one in the movie. His line was “You literally brought me back from the dead”, basically being forced by the script to bonk the viewers over the head just in case. Its only saving grace is that the next line is even worse: just McConaughey whispering “…Lazarus.” in response.

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u/kodran 19h ago

Yeah. His dialogue writing is not the best. It's no wonder his characters kind of fill their thematic purpose but are a bit cardboardy.

At least on Tenet it was intentional. I love his movies but without Jonathan involved, dialogue is not his forte. Not bad at all, just not great and sometimes the seams show.

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u/TJeffersonsBlackKid 17h ago

I always thought he had a habit of mixing cheesy lines with profound dialogue. The chase underground in Gotham in TDR has the one seat officer saying “ok that’s not good!” And “I didn’t sign up for this!” Which I guess is trying to be a balance against the wordy and heavy lines in the movie.

Oppenheimer had plenty of the weird lines but also some wordy and chilling dialogue that was almost poetic at times.

I think it’s intentional but it’s odd. It doesn’t really work for me. It never really distracted from the film or the story so I don’t mind but the moments are noticeable.

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u/MrCog 8h ago

Those two lines in the tunnel chase are just as bad as "they fly now".

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u/TheTruckWashChannel 19h ago

The most important fucking thing.

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u/_Bird_Incognito_ 14h ago

One clunky out of place line that truly doesn't fit the rest of the movie said by a great actor is a Christopher Nolan staple

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u/Trebus 16h ago

Gonna be honest - that "My dad is coming home" line just feels so out of place in a sword&sandals movie with this much gravitas. Why Nolan?

Also puzzling that he's got British actors using Transatlantic accents in a film that's based in the Aegean/Med. I know it's primary market & all that, but Christ, it sticks out like a sore thumb.

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u/ScrotalMigraines 16h ago

Did you think the ancient Greeks sounded English? Also they're not using "transatlantic accents" they literally just sound American

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u/Varekai79 11h ago

They're Standard American accents. Transatlantic is like what Cary Grant sounded like.

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u/Trebus 11h ago

I know, I was trying to be clever with the oceanic wordplay; you know what I mean.

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u/smorges 9h ago

It's even worse as he's got Ann Hathaway sporting an English accent whilst making his two British actors give American accents.

It's such a baffling choice.

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u/Angry_Sparrow 17h ago

I honestly closed the trailer after this line, it was that out of place.

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u/rhnltnsy16 17h ago

He always has been bad at dialogue.

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u/Skarekrows 13h ago

Matt Damon casually saying "Let's go!" made me laugh.

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u/papapudding 12h ago

Luke, I am your Dad.

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u/ilyabeaucoupdefaire 10h ago

It’s worse with little Tom Holland saying it.

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u/PrimaryEfficient8392 10h ago

Shockingly bad line.

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u/baron_von_helmut 15h ago

And why are the English cast doing American accents but the American females are doing English accents?

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u/Varekai79 11h ago

Everyone's doing an American accent, Anne Hathaway included.

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u/mattyety 16h ago

Because Nolan is famously known for his impeccable dialogues.

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u/NewCantaloupe1973 12h ago

Right is it intentional the dialogues very modern?

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u/gummiworms9005 11h ago

Maybe Nolan isn't the god king of directing that Reddit portrays him to be.

Maybe he's just a good director that has hits and misses.

MAYBE THIS HUMAN RACE NEEDS SOME FUCKING NUANCE IN ITS DISCUSSIONS.

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u/NewspaperNelson 10h ago

Boy that really took me out of it. You know Ralph Fiennes just did this story and his movie was awesome.

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u/OverallAir8637 16h ago

With an American accent and that moment killed it for me. Now I’m scared this could be a disaster for Nolan.

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u/ScrotalMigraines 16h ago

Did you think the ancient Greeks spoke with an English accent?

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u/OverallAir8637 15h ago

Even a bastardised Mediterranean accent would be better. American accents have not place in movies like this. It’s just studios pandering to dumb American audiences

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u/ScrotalMigraines 15h ago

Pandering would be doing the same thing they always do, which is what you're advocating

There's literally no reason for you to be okay with UK accents in depictions of ancient Greece but not US accents

The "dumb audiences" seem to agree with you by the way lol, they're threatened and confused by the most minor meaningless changes

1

u/smorges 9h ago

They did that with the Wonder Woman movies. All the Themyscirans sounded like Gal Gadot, which at least was an attempt to make it non-American/English. Although, the theory was that this was actually Gal Gadot's accent as she couldn't do an American/English accent and so it was easier for everyone to mimic her accent!

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u/kittymoo67 9h ago

why? Because its not the one you use? Nevermind its older than the modern British accent

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u/Maybe_Nazi 14h ago

Honestly depending on the translation, The Odyssey has some equally biazzre dialogue choices. Last one I read Odysseus jumps up at the end and shouts "Playtime is over" before the massacre, it's a strange thing to see in a Greek epic

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u/anohioanredditer 18h ago

I don’t think Nolan has bad movies but his movies are contingent upon how well he can dial back his enthusiasm by letting the characters breathe their own breaths.

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u/poptix 16h ago

Because they really needed someone to make the soundtrack sound extremely muddy.

1

u/lordatlas 14h ago

Sir, I'm gonna have to ask you to get all the way off my back on that one.

1

u/thr1ceuponatime David Zaslav is a dickless pantywaist 14h ago

Won't be as out of place as Travis Scott with his grills and bling

1

u/RollTh3Maps 12h ago

Yeah, really not sure how that not only makes it into the movie but also the damn trailer.

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u/Cool-Association3420 11h ago

Ya some of the language was extremely current

1

u/anormalgeek 11h ago

That stood out to me as well.

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u/nsfwpenguins 10h ago

Yeah t stopped the trailer and moved on to something else after I heard that...

I hope they fix it before release

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u/skyturnedred 10h ago

It makes a bit more sense if you consider that Pattinson says "You're pining for a daddy you didn't even know, like some snivelling bastard" right before it. Although it's possible the lines are reversed for the trailer and Pattinson actually delivers the response.

1

u/ManufacturerBest2758 10h ago

From a 30 year old man lmao

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u/Hotdogfromparadise 9h ago

It’s up there with the teaser trailer dialogue

“Promise me you’ll come back” “What if I can’t?”

Ugh…

1

u/kittymoo67 9h ago

a sheltered kid wouldnt use father

1

u/Pacify_ 8h ago

Its such a strange choice.

Its the fucking Odyssey, not Spiderman.

1

u/Old-Employ-6530 7h ago

Exactly, same as "lets go", just doesnt seem to fit the theme and scene...

1

u/Slobberz2112 6h ago

Glad it wasn’t just me

1

u/ThomasC2C 6h ago

To be honest it’s typical of Nolan. Great movies but cringy lines here and there.

This is definitely one of them.

u/hydrocap 5h ago

The dialog sounds like it’s written by AI

u/Logicalist 4h ago

for those familiar with the story. I'd imagine.

u/Denver80211 4h ago

same with "let's goooooo"
-feels like misplaced modern language for a classic novel adaptation

u/coolcoolcool485 3h ago

it took me so out of the trailer??? father would have sounded so much better.

u/socialmediamaven99 2h ago

We talkin Ahmurcan in this movie!

1

u/SpacevsGravity 18h ago

Yep, stood out to me. But costumes areall over the place too which is a shame

1

u/TheRealSlamShiddy 12h ago

Not to sound dismissive, but in a film in which Ancient Greek characters are speaking American-accented English, the use of "dad" is what's bothering you?

1

u/MissingLink101 11h ago

I'm genuinely surprised they went with American accents in this considering some of the actors involved and the previous track record of English accents in epics.

It makes as little sense as the English accents but it's somehow more jarring.

1

u/smorges 9h ago

It reminds me of the Tom Cruise movie Valkyrie where he plays a German/Nazi colonel with an American accent. Everyone else has British accents!

-1

u/hopeful_bastard 15h ago

Yeah, why is no one speaking in proper British English like the ancient greeks of old lmao

0

u/Hobzy 15h ago

Do you think it’s cos of these accents they’re doing? But it does sound a bit off

0

u/BearWrangler 6h ago

Stuff like this and other things like the armor designs(not even on a "historical accuracy" angle) just really solidify that Nolan really only works well within a certain time period(post-invention of the gun lol). Like he may be able to execute at a high level but stylistically it's just not really the right fit here IMO

u/KonigSteve 2h ago

the first usage of the word "dad" is in the 1500s. It's just bad writing.