@JillPhys1905@dr4liberty With your kind of thinking, two wrongs blah blah blah and support for the orange man, no need to have enemies at all. Self destruction is assured.
@dr4liberty I wish my leaders held higher moral standards. Obama is better with language and the details. Funny how a lot of the farming money was actually transferred to NGOs instead.
Obama hurt the US longterm by helping our enemies. Trump kills them.
So let me get this straight: Donald Trump sues his own IRS, and before a judge even sees the case, Trump’s lawyers and Trump’s IRS lawyers strike a deal creating a $1.776 billion taxpayer-funded settlement fund that Trump himself will oversee—deciding who deserves compensation for supposedly being “weaponized” by the justice system. The agreement also bars the IRS from ever investigating Trump, his businesses, or his family again. Then they tell the court the case was settled before it was even filed, so the judge has no jurisdiction. Corruption on a scale "we’ve never seen before!" 4-D level corruption.
Nearly four thousand years ago, in a desolate valley between rocky mountains, a father and son (Prophet Abraham & Ishmael) raised the foundations of a house dedicated to the One God.
Not every secret needs to be whispered. Sometimes a look says everything you’re dying to ask. So—what’s the first thought that crossed your mind just now?
@79Error@covie_93 Funny thing, hellen of troy is a fictional character, Rosa Parks is/was a real person. No amount of gerrymandering would change these facts.
Same with my parents we are Romanian Greeks. The point I was trying to make is that if you claim to respect someone’s writings then respect them all the way through! Do not interpret! Nolan is turning Homer into a complete mockery. Greeks have nothing to do with Africans blacks or trans and I’m not being hateful I’m being honest and factual! Even if you say the Odyssey is fiction it is Homer’s fiction and it’s not up for interpretation! The physical descriptions in Homer’s Odyssey are clear! Full stop! To me Nolan shows contempt racism towards Greeks and Greek civilization full stop those who don’t care about historical accuracy will see this movie as actual fact when it’s nothing but fiction mockery and for me an abomination! My Greek Romanian heritage is something I’m very proud and will never let anyone tarnish it and make a mockery out of it.
Hey folks, let's cut through the noise and talk about Christopher Nolan's upcoming epic, The Odyssey + because the pre-release hate train is wild, and honestly, it's missing the point entirely.
Nobody has seen this movie yet.
It's not even out until July 17, 2026.
Yet everyone's acting like it's already ruined Western civilization or something.
Chill.
Let's actually analyze why this could be one of the most exciting blockbusters in years, why the backlash (even from Elon Musk) is basically free publicity gold, and why artistic freedom means we get to have bold new takes on ancient stories instead of demanding carbon-copy remakes every single time.
Don't like it? Don't watch.
Simple as that.
But I'm choosing to see the positive here – and I’m convinced Nolan is going to deliver something massive.
First off, huge shoutout to the man himself, Christopher Nolan.
This guy doesn’t miss.
From Inception blowing our minds with dream layers and practical effects, to Interstellar making us cry over space-time and fatherhood, @dunkirkmovie delivering raw war tension on IMAX, and @OppenheimerFilm turning a historical biopic into a cultural phenomenon – he’s a master storyteller who treats cinema like an event.
Sure, some of his latest films have had those “woke” elements people love to debate – diverse casting choices, modern thematic spins, the usual Hollywood stuff that shows up in big-budget productions these days.
But guess what?
They were still phenomenal movies that grossed hundreds of millions and got people talking. Nolan has never been a preachy director; he’s about spectacle, intellect, and emotion.
The Odyssey feels like a return to his pure epic roots, and that’s exciting as hell.
The film is an adaptation of Homer’s ancient Greek epic poem. It reminds me of my Greek mythology teacher during my first days at university in Russia.
Yes, in Russia and throughout the former Soviet Union, Greek mythology was something practically everyone knew.
🔵🔵🔵
The story follows Odysseus and his decade-long journey home after the Trojan War, a voyage filled with gods, monsters, sirens, cyclopes, and the ultimate tests of loyalty, cunning, and heroism.
Nolan isn’t doing a dry, classroom-accurate documentary here.
He’s reimagining it as a mythic action epic shot entirely on cutting-edge IMAX film across six countries, with massive practical effects – including a real, full-scale ship built for the production.
Think sweeping seascapes, visceral battles, mind-bending timelines (Nolan’s signature fractured narrative style), and that bone-rattling sound design he’s famous for.
This isn’t some green-screen Marvel slop; it’s cinema on steroids.
Matt Damon as Odysseus?
You mean, Jason Bourne as Odysseus!
Perfect choice for a battle-hardened, clever everyman hero who just wants to get home to his family.
Tom Holland as Telemachus brings youthful energy and determination to the son searching for his father.
Anne Hathaway as Penelope? Iconic loyal wife energy.
Zendaya as Athena adds that divine wisdom and mischief. Charlize Theron as Calypso (or Circe in some reports) – powerhouse.
Robert Pattinson, Jon Bernthal, Mia Goth, the list goes on.
Shall I continue?
Star power for days.
🔵🔵🔵
And yes, Lupita Nyong’o is playing the dual role of Helen of Troy and her sister Clytemnestra. That’s the big lightning rod right now.
Helen – the “most beautiful woman in the world” whose face launched a thousand ships.
Ancient descriptions paint her as fair-skinned, but myths evolve, retellings change details, and directors have creative license.
Nolan confirmed it himself in a recent Time profile, and he’s framing the whole thing as bold speculation, not strict history.
This isn’t “erasing” anything; it’s an artist choosing his vision for a story that’s been adapted a million ways already.
Remember the BBC’s Troy: Fall of a City or the 2004 Brad Pitt Troy?
They took huge liberties too.
Or go further back – every culture has remixed Greek myths for centuries.
Artistic freedom is literally what makes storytelling alive. If a director wants to cast a two-time Oscar winner like Lupita (who’s phenomenal in everything from 12 Years a Slave to Black Panther) in a dual role that adds family drama and emotional layers between Helen and Clytemnestra, why not?
It’s not a history textbook; it’s entertainment designed to thrill on the biggest screen possible.
@ElonMusk jumped in hard, calling it "contempt for the Greek people” and “pissing on Homer’s grave."
Look, Elon’s opinion is his own – and he’s got every right to voice it.
But here’s the beautiful irony: his tweets (and the whole controversy) are giving The Odyssey the kind of free publicity money can’t buy.
We’re months out, and it’s trending everywhere. People who might’ve skipped a Greek myth movie are now invested, debating, sharing trailers.
That buzz translates to butts in seats on opening weekend. Remember how The Last Jedi or other divisive projects still made bank because of the conversation?
Elon’s basically doing Nolan’s marketing team a favor. The more noise, the more curiosity.
July 17, 2026, is going to be packed.And let’s be real about adaptations: they’re never 100% faithful.
Take the Sherlock Holmes series Elementary (2012-2019) – Lucy Liu as Dr. Joan Watson.
Not the original male Watson from Arthur Conan Doyle’s books. Gender swap, race change, modern New York setting instead of Victorian London.
Was it "really" Sherlock Holmes? Not in the strict canon sense.
But it ran for seven seasons, had great writing, chemistry between Jonny Lee Miller and Liu, and delivered fresh detective stories that hooked millions.
People watched because it was entertaining, not because it matched every detail of the 19th-century text.
Same principle here. If you want a verbatim Homer recitation with all-white ancient Greek actors and no modern flair, go read the epic poem or watch an old-school stage play. Hollywood adaptations have always taken liberties – that’s how they stay relevant.
Don’t like it? Don’t watch.
🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹
It’s the ultimate freedom. No one’s forcing you into the theater.The negativity feels overblown because it’s preemptive.
We haven’t seen a single frame in context. Nolan has a track record of turning "risky" ideas into masterpieces.
Practical effects? Check.
IMAX spectacle? Check.
A story about homecoming, cleverness over brute force, the gods meddling in human affairs – themes that resonate today.
Add Travis Scott as the bard (a creative nod to oral poetry’s rhythmic, rap-like tradition), and you’ve got something fresh.
Myths were oral traditions passed down and changed with each teller anyway – Homer himself was building on older tales.
Nolan’s version is just the latest evolution.I’m optimistic because Nolan + this cast + this scale + the current hype = potential for something special. It could be the epic adventure we’ve been craving in an era of safe sequels and IP reboots.
Visually stunning battles at Troy’s aftermath, the emotional weight of Odysseus’s trials, the clever tricks against the suitors – all wrapped in Nolan’s brainy style.
Even if some casting feels like "woke" Hollywood checkbox stuff (and yeah, recent big films including some of Nolan’s have leaned that way), the proof is in the final product. Past “controversial” choices haven’t stopped great movies from being great.
Oppenheimer had its share of diversity talk but became a phenomenon on merit. Same potential here.
Cinema is about wonder, not purity tests. Directors get to choose their version of the story. Audiences get to vote with their wallets.
If the final cut is a bloated mess, we can criticize it then. But right now? Let’s give it a chance. Nolan has earned that.
The Elon-fueled publicity storm is only helping it reach more eyes. I, for one, am buying my IMAX tickets day one and going in with an open mind.
This could be the summer 2026 event movie that reminds us why we love the big screen – epic, entertaining, and unapologetically ambitious.
What do you think?
Are you excited for The Odyssey despite (or because of) the drama? Or are you sitting this one out? Drop your thoughts below.
Let’s keep the conversation going positively – because at the end of the day, it’s just a movie. A really big, potentially awesome one.
Can’t wait to see what Nolan pulls off. 🚀
P.S. If you’re new to the Odyssey story, reread the poem or listen to an audiobook first. It’ll make the film hit even harder. Myths are timeless for a reason – they adapt and survive.
Let’s celebrate that instead of tearing it down before the lights even dim.
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Kenya is the weakest link in pan africanism , like kept doing business with apartheid South Africa. , supports Israel , supports the west , was anti Libya , now when all former French colonies are against France and couldn’t host Kenya did . Like ??? White people much???
Ryan Reynolds’ career is toast, he’s going down with Blake. He tried to distance himself and stayed away from the courtroom, but the emails and texts popped up, he tried an interview where he said that his wife, a proven liar had the most integrity of anyone he knew. That went over like a lead balloon, so he skipped the Met Gala, and let her preen on her own. Now he’s taken the most painful selfie known to man, with a smile that doesn’t reach his eyes, pretending he still likes Blake Lively after she tanked both of their careers.
@TheOnlyKemi You do have regrets, people be lying to you in support of your self importance, and yet here you are 5 years in and you're still shouting about it, it affected you, you're hiding behind non existent self importance
When I called off my wedding on a Thursday… just 2 days before the actual day, none of my supposed groom’s family members reached out to me.
Not his mum.
Not his siblings.
Not even the groom himself.
That silence told me everything I needed to know.
5 years later, I still have no regrets.