While tickets for 70mm IMAX screenings sold out a year in advance, indicating strong anticipation, Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey has now received early reviews confirming that the film meets the high standards audiences expect from the director of Oppenheimer.

Early reactions arrived today, delivering a wave of superlatives from both fanboys and professional critics. Such responses should always be viewed with some caution, however.

L.A. Times film editor Joshua Rothkopf called the film “staggering—earthy, ghostly, weighty, touched by humor and grandeur alike. It’s pure cinema.” He added that it feels “like a return home to the robustly entertaining action movies that cinema was invented to tell.”

Time Out critic Phil de Semlyen raved, “Believe the hype: The Odyssey is that film.” He described it as “dense but accessible.”

The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw wrote, “Christopher Nolan’s Odyssey is a colossal origin‑myth story of postwar disillusion and a loss of innocence.”

Indiewire’s Anne Thompson highlighted the film’s award potential: “Matt Damon could win Best Actor and a bevy of supporting thesps and noms will follow. This is the picture to beat for Best Picture.”

Indiewire’s chief film critic, David Erlich, offered a more tempered view, noting it is “less despairing” than Oppenheimer but “too clunky to be S‑tier Nolan, though the final act rewards the journey.”

The Odyssey opens on July 17, with initial domestic projections between $80 M and $100 M; those numbers could shift if the positive buzz continues.

Further reactions can be found in the posts below.



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