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Home»News»What the hell happened to Christopher Nolan? The Odyssey casting backlash explained — RT Entertainment
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What the hell happened to Christopher Nolan? The Odyssey casting backlash explained — RT Entertainment

channel1la.comBy channel1la.comJune 3, 2026No Comments
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What the hell happened to Christopher Nolan? The Odyssey casting backlash explained — RT Entertainment
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Christopher Nolan is probably the last director in Hollywood who can still sell a movie on his name alone without having to make a new entry into a wrung-out franchise, a superhero flick, or a nostalgia reboot set to a slow piano version of a song you used to like. Just “a Christopher Nolan film” still gets a lot of butts into seats.

Which is why many are confused, and understandably outraged, that he’s apparently gone the woke DEI casting route with his upcoming adaptation of Homer’s The Odyssey. 

For years, Nolan has apparently had a blank check to film whatever he wants, with whoever he wants, without studio execs breathing down his neck. In the public’s eye, Nolan is not Disney scraping the bottom of the remake barrel, or Netflix with its addictive habit of turning historical figures into focus-grouped avatars of “modern audiences.” 

Fresh off Oppenheimer, a three-hour biopic about nuclear physicists that managed to sweep the Oscars and the box office, nobody expected Nolan to engage in the same desperate corporate pandering that has been ruining Hollywood for well over a decade.

And yet here we are, watching The Odyssey become the latest culture-war bonfire because Hollywood cannot retell a classic story without making it look like a DEI compliance exercise.

The mythological epic, supposedly Nolan’s most ambitious production yet, is set for release on July 17, 2026, featuring a massive ensemble cast including Matt Damon as Odysseus, alongside Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Robert Pattinson, Charlize Theron, Jon Bernthal, and others.

While most of the casting has not raised too many eyebrows, with even Zendaya playing Athena barely getting more than a tired scoff, the confirmed choice for Helen of Troy has set the internet ablaze.

Helen, the Greek beauty icon whose face famously launched “a thousand ships,” will be played by Kenyan-Mexican actress Lupita Nyong’o.

“White-armed Helen”

Homer (author of the Iliad and the Odyssey) explicitly described Helen of Troy as “white-armed” (Greek: leukōlenos).

It’s literally in the book.

Christopher Nolan’s film edition is racist against white women. pic.twitter.com/EZaOaMCUuT

— Dr Taylor Marshall™️ (@TaylorRMarshall) May 13, 2026

As usual, the issue isn’t her acting chops. She already has an Oscar. The problem is that her casting makes no sense inside an ancient Greek epic. Helen is not some random side character. She is a mythic icon of beauty, desire and status in an ancient Mediterranean world.

Nolan has defended Nyong’o as his first and only choice for Helen, praising her “strength” and “poise” while Nyong’o herself has shrugged off the backlash insisting that “you can’t perform beauty” and using the excuse that the story is mythological and isn’t grounded in reality.

But audiences aren’t buying it. Nobody thinks Homer wrote a documentary. The Odyssey has gods, monsters, witches, and a cyclops. But “mythological” does not mean “anything goes.” Fantasy and myth still need coherence, and audiences still need to believe in the world on screen.  

However, escapism is something Hollywood appears to be actively fighting against. 

Chris Nolan desecrated the Odyssey so that he would be eligible for an Academy Award …

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) May 15, 2026

The rumored, but not yet confirmed, casting of a scrawny post-transition Elliot Page (formerly Ellen Page) as Achilles, the greatest warrior in Greek mythology, has poured even more gasoline on the fire, with memes writing themselves, especially since most audiences still associate the character with a young Brad Pitt in peak physical form in Troy. 

Rapper Travis Scott, reportedly cast as a bard, has further irritated audiences. While Nolan has defended the choice by comparing Greek oral poetry to rap, it’s likely to end up as nothing more than a celebrity gimmick to “speak to younger audiences.”

There is also good reason to believe that the film is not actually based on the original Homer poem, but on Emily Wilson’s feminist translation of The Odyssey, which Nolan has already referenced in several interviews. While not confirmed, the possibility has only further reinforced suspicions that this adaptation is being filtered through a modern ideological lens where white cisgender men are bad and everything else is good by definition.

While the access media desperately defends the casting, it also has ironically been ignoring the obvious question: where are the Greeks? In a film based on Homer’s Greek epic, filmed partly in Greece, and built around Greek mythology, actual Greeks or Greek-Americans appear nowhere near the center of the story.

Greek critics have already pointed this out, arguing that Hollywood treats the country and its culture as nothing more than an aesthetic backdrop.

As usual, anyone questioning the casting is accused of being racist, transphobic, fragile or part of some troll army, employing the same playbook that has been used ad nauseam over the past decade, from The Rings of Power and The Little Mermaid to Snow White, Star Wars and other once-beloved franchises dragged into irrelevance by the modern messaging machine.

But the trick has long been worn out and never worked to begin with. For regular audiences, it only confirms that Hollywood would rather insult the fanbase than admit diversity casting doesn’t actually make a good film.

The Odyssey already carries the stink of the Hollywood tropes audiences have been rejecting for years, and a large number of people have already opted out of seeing Nolan’s upcoming feature over the casting and direction. 

However, despite the backlash, the Odyssey will still probably perform well. Nolan still has a reputation and a loyal fanbase, but the question is whether either survives once the movie finally hits theaters.

And if it succeeds, what lesson will Hollywood learn? Probably the wrong one: that audiences can be forced to accept ideological pandering, and that the backlash can be dismissed, mocked and outlasted.

Which means studios will probably double down yet again, turning even more classic stories into lazy modern political pamphlets while blaming the audience for their failures.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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