First trailer for Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’: concerning or exciting?

One of my favorite classes in college was Greek mythology. So much fun, full of gorgeous imagery and incredible stories. One of my least favorite parts of the class was studying The Odyssey, the tale of Odysseus trying to return home to his wife Penelope after the Trojan War. It takes him a DECADE to get home, although to be fair, the bulk of those ten years were spent as Calypso’s lover and captive. So, arguably, he only spent three years trying to get home. Anyway, Christopher Nolan decided that The Odyssey would be his follow-up to winning the Oscar for Oppenheimer. The film will come out next July, but the first trailer dropped before Christmas.

That’s Matt Damon as Odysseus, Anne Hathaway as Penelope, Tom Holland as their son WhatsHisFace. The rest of the cast includes Zendaya (as the goddess Athena), Robert Pattinson as Antinous (one of Penelope’s suitors), Charlize Theron as Circe, Lupita Nyong’o as… unknown for now. Mia Goth, Elliot Page, Jon Bernthal, Cosmo Jarvis and many others are included in the cast. I’ll admit, I’m interested to see what Nolan does with the Sirens and the Cyclops. The whole thing is shot entirely on IMAX cameras as well. What do you think? I know the Greek history nerds are already mad about helmets and armor, and so be it. I’m fine with Nolan taking liberties with that kind of stuff, truly. What worries me is that Nolan doesn’t always have great instincts for casting, especially when it comes to women. Hathaway is a good choice for Penelope, but I’m worried about the other ladies.

Photos courtesy of ‘The Odyssey’/Universal/IMDB.

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26 Responses to “First trailer for Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’: concerning or exciting?”

  1. Becks1 says:

    I’m excited for this. This is literally an epic story (maybe THE epic story) and I think Nolan can do justice to it.

  2. jessicaMortiz says:

    It looks really underwhelming. Trailers are meant to stoke interest. This is kinda bland and does not make me want to rush out and see it.

    • SarahCS says:

      Thank you, between that and the Matt Damon of it all I went in excited and came out not excited.

      I love these stories (although get mixed up between what happened to Odysseus and the adventures of the Argonauts) and I’d be all over a big retelling but this isn’t doing it for me.

  3. seraphina says:

    Greek mythology and history nerd here (raising hand) and I am going in with an open mind. Looking forward to it.

  4. Sun says:

    His style is just so dark and serious/ dreary. I never picture the Greek myths as such drudgery.

  5. Eurydice says:

    Lol, son WhatsHisFace is Telemachus. And a good chunk of the story is his coming of age. There’s so much in The Odyssey that goes beyond “a journey home” that I don’t expect Nolan to capture much of it, but I’ll watch his film to see what does with it.

  6. Amy T says:

    Oooh. Add me to the excited nerd list. Loaned my Emily Wilson translation to a friend and now I’m going to get it back and reread it before the film drops. That said, I wonder which translation he used as his script source…

    • Eurydice says:

      Nolan has said he was inspired by Wilson’s translation. Translations are so interesting – they reflect the culture and time during which they were made. Fagles is poetic and cinematic, but kind of mushy and PC. I like Lattimore because he sticks closer to the language and construction of the original, but today’s readers might find him too academic. I think Wilson is taking too many liberties and making it her version of the epic, but that’s OK, too – nothing wrong with looking at things a different way. A friend of mine and I meet a couple times a week to read The Odyssey in the original Homeric Greek. Greek is my first language, so I have a sense of the vocabulary, but the grammar is a beast. Still, it’s fun to take deep dive into the work.

  7. bisynaptic says:

    I suspect these people are too old to be playing the parts they’ve been cast to play.

    • Auntie Fah says:

      Hard agree. Damon is such an odd choice. And I don’t love the casting of Hathaway either.

      • Jill says:

        Agreed. Damon as Odysseus is such a what the hell casting choice to me. Not surprised that Hathaway is Penelope and I actually like Charlize Theron as Circe. Zendaya as Athena surprises me because in my mind, Athena is older. I’m sure she’ll do fine though. I bet Lupita is Calypso and I feel bad that she’s stuck playing Matt’s lover. I would have asked if we could swap actors. I mean Jon Bernthal is right there.

  8. Rita says:

    Odysseus’s armour looks like a Batman costume, LOL.

  9. Normades says:

    Great prestige casting (except Damon).

  10. Auntie Fah says:

    Idk I feel like this is going to be Nolan’s Megalopolis.

  11. M says:

    I’ll stick with the Armand Assante version. Matt Damon seems all wrong for it.

  12. therese says:

    I love the helmets. Not a feel good movie.

  13. Elly says:

    The IMAX tickets sold out within an hour of release last July 2025!

  14. ariel says:

    I can’t say i recall much, as the parts i read of it were in Latin way, way back in my school years.
    And those stories are amazing.
    My first reaction to the trailer is – oh, i see we’re still in that “super realistic” style of filming in the dark so the audience can’t actually see what is happening.
    And Matt Damon just strikes me as the kind of white liberal that are the reason black people can’t trust white liberals, so i find him irritating.

    But mythology- even the bad stuff is great, and deeply weird.
    I’ll give this movie a shot.

  15. AMB says:

    For reinterpretation of the classic into the popular media of the day, for me, Tennyson will always get first billing. (English major here, obvs.)
    .
    “It little profits that an idle king,
    By this still hearth, among these barren crags …”
    .
    https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45392/ulysses

    • SarahCS says:

      I do love some Tennyson, I asked for an anthology a few christmases back and read them out loud to myself (and the cat) from time to time.

  16. Jess says:

    I loved Greek mythology growing up but now, as a cranky middle aged woman, I’m tired of media that centers men. That’s why I’m now obsessed with all of the feminist retellings of the Greek myths. Circe is an obvious gem in that category, but there are so many good ones – the Women of Troy series, all of Natalie Haynes books, and others. So I don’t know if I’m interested in going back to the odyssey, especially given how poorly Nolan treats women in his movies.

    • SarahCS says:

      I was delighted to discover Nathalie Haynes a few years back and have re-read Pandoras Jar a few times now. I’m halfway through Stone Blind but I had to give up on the Troy one, too bleak (not exactly a surprise but still).

      • Jess says:

        Yea. A lot of these stories have a lot of hard stuff – it was not good to be a woman at that time. Clytemnestra is a good one. Not as bleak as the others.

    • Elly says:

      No one can make Zendaya look bad.

  17. MaisiesMom says:

    I also loved Greek mythology but didn’t enjoy “Odyssey” when I read it in high school. English was my favorite subject, so maybe I was a little too young to appreciate it yet? This looks interesting though. I might head to the theater for it. And have another go at the book.

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