- NBA issues fines to Hornets guard Ball, T-Wolves guard Anthony
- Biden allows Ukraine to strike Russia with long-range missiles: US official
- Britain dump out holders Canada to reach BJK Cup semi-finals
- Biden clears Ukraine for missile strikes inside Russia
- Ukrainians brave arduous journeys to Russian-occupied homeland
- Australia not focusing on Grand Slam sweep after thrashing Wales
- Wales's rugby woes -- three talking points
- Jannik Sinner, the atypical Italian star on top of the tennis world
- 'Devil is in the details,' EU chief says of S.America trade deal
- Kusal Mendis defies injury as Sri Lanka beat New Zealand to clinch ODI series
- Gatland would back change after Australia condemn Wales to record defeat
- England rout Ireland to earn Nations League promotion in Carsley farewell
- England secure Nations League promotion, Haaland inspires Norway
- Sinner sweeps past Fritz to win ATP Finals
- Massive Russian air attack pounds Ukraine as 1,000th day of war nears
- Mahrez scores as five-goal Algeria crush Liberia
- Toll in Tanzania building collapse rises to 13, survivors trapped
- 'Red One' tops N.America box office but could end up in the red
- NATO's largest artillery exercise underway in Finland
- Australia condemn Wales to record 11th successive loss in 52-20 rout
- Russian opposition marches against Putin in Berlin
- Ukraine announces power restrictions after 'massive' Russian attack
- Biden begins historic Amazon trip amid Trump climate fears
- Dozens killed, missing in Israeli strike on devastated north Gaza
- Macron defends French farmers in talks with Argentina's Milei
- England players to blame for losing streak says captain George
- 'Emotional' Martin defies Bagnaia to claim first MotoGP world championship
- Slovakia beat Australia to reach BJK Cup semi-finals
- Sluggish Italy fight to narrow win over Georgia
- India and Nigeria renew ties as Modi visits
- Grit and talent, a promise and a dilemma: three things about Jorge Martin
- Martin denies Bagnaia to win first MotoGP world championship
- Typhoon Man-yi weakens as it crosses Philippines' main island
- Noel wins season-opening slalom in Levi as Hirscher struggles
- Tough questions for England as Springboks make it five defeats in a row
- Russia pounds Ukraine with 'massive' attack in 'hellish' night
- McIlroy clinches Race to Dubai title with DP World Tour Championship win
- Glastonbury 2025 tickets sell out in 35 minutes
- 迪拜棕榈岛索菲特美憬阁酒店: 五星級健康綠洲
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: Пятизвездочный велнес-оазис
- New Zealand win revives France on their road to 2027 World Cup
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: A five-star wellness Oasis
- Israel hits Gaza and Lebanon in deadly strikes
- Power cuts as Russian missiles pound Ukraine's energy grid
- Denmark's Victoria Kjaer Theilvig crowned Miss Universe 2024
- Dutch police use hologram to try and decode sex worker's murder
- Israel bombs south Beirut after Hezbollah targets Haifa area
- Biden in historic Amazon trip as Trump return sparks climate fears
- India hails 'historic' hypersonic missile test flight
- Israel orders Beirut residents to flee after Hezbollah targets Haifa area
From 'Batman' to best director, Nolan stamps unique mark on Hollywood
Christopher Nolan, the indisputable Hollywood hitmaker whose ambitious and challenging blockbusters entice mainstream audiences and cult followings alike, finally confirmed his artistic pre-eminence with the Oscar-sweeping "Oppenheimer."
The British-American filmmaker -- an obsessively punctual, tea-swilling perfectionist, who is known for combining inventive, intellectual playfulness with an emphasis on realism -- was named best director at the Academy Awards on Sunday.
"Movies are just a little bit over 100 years old," Nolan told the audience at the Dolby Theatre.
"We don't know where this incredible journey is going from here. But to know that you think that I'm a meaningful part of it means the world to me."
It is the high point -- so far -- of a career that has taken Nolan from arthouse darling ("Memento") to superhero savior (the "Dark Knight" films) to rare purveyor of original sci-fi ("Inception," "Interstellar") in a market dominated by sequels.
Nolan, 53, had come close to Oscars success in the past, most notably with his stunning 2017 war epic "Dunkirk."
But the director -- sometimes dismissed by critics as a masterful technician and genre-bound filmmaker rather than a true visionary auteur -- had never won an Oscar before "Oppenheimer," which dominated Sunday's gala, taking seven statuettes overall.
Born in 1970, the son of a British advertising copywriter and an American air hostess, Nolan had a distinctly trans-Atlantic childhood.
After watching "Star Wars" and a re-release of "2001: A Space Odyssey" in theaters at the age of seven, Nolan quickly began making films on his father's old Super 8 camera.
Nolan attended an austere boarding school before studying English literature at University College London -- which he chose in part for its filmmaking facitilities.
While there, he met and ran a movie society with his future wife and producer, Emma Thomas, who he followed to Los Angeles after graduating.
Nolan came to fame at age 30 with "Memento." A fiercely intelligent and twisty avant-garde noir with the non-linear narrative that has become his hallmark, it was a festival hit and earned the director his first Oscar nomination, for its screenplay.
- 'Proud' -
Nolan's big-budget directorial debut was 2002's "Insomnia," which starred Al Pacino as an LA cop sent to investigate a murder in Alaska.
Veteran director Steven Soderbergh recommended Nolan to Warner Bros, and later recounted a conversation he had with Pacino on the movie's set.
"I can tell you right now, at some point in the very near future, I'm going to be very proud to say I was in 'a Christopher Nolan movie,'" Pacino told Soderbergh.
The movie's success enabled Nolan to pitch Warner his gritty, realistic vision for the new Batman films the studio was planning.
The resulting "Batman Begins" kick-started a trilogy of Nolan-directed movies starring Christian Bale as the caped crusader.
Part two, "The Dark Knight," is often considered the greatest superhero film ever made. It was certainly the first to gross $1 billion, and the first to earn an acting Oscar, a posthumous prize for Heath Ledger as the villainous Joker.
The third, "The Dark Knight Rises," drew less critical acclaim, but remains the biggest commercial hit of Nolan's, in a career filmography that has grossed more than $6 billion.
In amongst those films, Nolan released "The Prestige," a period thriller about two duelling stage magicians, played by Bale and Hugh Jackman, and "Inception."
- Nuclear -
"Inception," a wildly ambitious heist movie in which Leonardo DiCaprio and Marion Cotillard hop between nested dream worlds, consolidated Nolan's reputation as a unique Hollywood filmmaker who could obtain big budgets and total creative control for original movies -- and still return a profit.
It won four Oscars, including for its stunning visual effects, and earned Nolan his first individual Academy Award nominations since "Memento."
His next original sci-fi, "Interstellar," claimed another visual effects Oscar, and kick-started Nolan's ongoing collaboration with esteemed theoretical physicist Kip Thorne.
Nolan then turned his attention to the past with "Dunkirk," a tense retelling of the storied World War II evacuation of hundreds of thousands of Allied troops from a beach in northern France.
The movie earned Nolan his first best director nomination, and its 1940s period setting foreshadowed "Oppenheimer."
Likewise, his next movie "Tenet" -- another ambitious, original sci-fi -- introduced Nolan's concern with nuclear armageddon.
But it was reading "American Prometheus" -- the 2005 Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb -- that launched Nolan on the path to a film that would finally bring him Oscar glory.
He bested Martin Scorsese ("Killers of the Flower Moon"), Jonathan Glazer ("The Zone of Interest"), Yorgos Lanthimos ("Poor Things") and Justine Triet ("Anatomy of a Fall") for the best director statuette.
A.Williams--AT