For Your Consideration: Christopher Nolan, Best Original Screenplay, Dunkirk

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With the weight of Dunkirk‘s award season run seemingly on the shoulders of Christopher Nolan as Best Director, I wanted to bring his chances for a Best Original Screenplay nomination to the table. Too many dismiss the writing because of the scale and style of the picture, that it will harm Dunkirk‘s chances for Best Picture. Well, here’s why you ought to vote for the screenplay.

1. THE HISTORY

At the 1953 Academy Awards, the Best Original Screenplay Oscar went to Titanic. Forty-four years later, a new, bigger Titanic would swamp the show with the record-tying 11 Oscar wins. But significantly without even an Original Screenplay nomination. Why? Because on the very rare occasion that the writing awards don’t go hand-in-hand with the Best Picture winner, the Academy recognize the importance of the screenplay. It would have been so, so easy just to tick the box that says Titanic and be done with it. I mean, they ticked every other box.

2. THE RESEARCH

Christopher Nolan wanted to make a suspenseful motion picture, the story of survival, over any war film pigeon-holing. Rather than have soldiers talk about their wives or what they did back home, Nolan was far more interested in the perspective shift of allegiance. The kind of Hitchcockian narrative style. What was happening in the moment, rather than based on what you know about these characters. And in doing so ambitiously intertwining three time-lines.

3. THE SCRIPT

Believe it or not, Christopher Nolan didn’t even want a script for Dunkirk at first. He just wanted to project his grand intentions onto the big screen. For a talented filmmaker who was oh-so close to Original Screenplay wins for both Memento (2001) and Inception (2010), this was a minor blip. Notably his brother Jonathan, thankfully helped sway from a no-script approach. You can’t ague with Nolan’s vision though. A true cinematic masterpiece, Dunkirk warrants some hefty praise for the screenplay, which has yet to be fully realized during this awards season.

Back in 1997, there were some huge contenders in the Original Screenplay avenue. And that was not always the case. The tide has turned recently, with a flourish of terrific original material, seemingly going head-to-head often. In the last 8 years, half of the Best Picture winners won Original Screenplay. With two others nominated but losing out (Midnight in Paris over The Artist, Manchester by the Sea over La La Land). Only Argo and 12 Years a Slave took the top prize from an adapted script.

It’s no secret, Nolan was a fan of some old war films, and wanted to not so much homage them, but allow him to greater understand the filmic platform for such films of human struggle. He had read the The Thin Red Line by James Jones, and considers Terrence Malick‘s 1998 film one of his all-time favorites. Nolan took on board, too, what the author Jones had to say about the reality of war, candidly spoken, and not just his depiction in the novel. Jones had a brash opinion about the writings of war-time from those that had not experienced it themselves. As well as an extremely close-to-Nolan’s-heart subject, the writer-director wanted to honor that notion in his screenwriting.

Nolan’s script-writing was a rigorous journey. Even after his sponge-brain absorbed copious amounts of related research, there was so much to the craft of his pages. Even actors like Mark Rylance gave their input. Nolan revised the script over and over. He writes with the camera very much in mind. And knew the kind of intonation and impact of music he wanted. Drip-feeding tension too, like the potentially damaged plane fuel gauge. Or waiting for the tide. He could hear the sounds as his very words transformed, the rattles, the bangs, the screams. Edging closer to the movie he wanted to make.

You go back, look at the 1960s for example, the adaptation was a key ingredient for the Best Picture win recipe. Original movies hardly ever won. The 1970s was a commonly thriving cinematic shift, the original stories sparked, shone brighter, in spite of their darker subject matter. On the turn of the decade a newcomer, Francis Ford Coppola, won Best Original Screenplay with Edmund H. North, for Best Picture winner Patton. The over-lavished The Sting would take it in 1973. A comedy would win in 1977. Two rather unpopular Best Picture winners in the early 1980s would add Original Screenplay to their heavy gold belts. Even more accepted winners of the Screenplay prize later would arguably have more deserving winners in the writing category. There’s only 12 Original Screenplay winners from Best Picture victors since that Coppola win in 1970.

All Quiet on the Western Front, the 3rd winner of the Best Picture Academy Award, was also a distinct influence for Nolan. The early scene from Dunkirk when boots are taken from a dead soldier’s feet is a hat-tip to that movie. Writing the script, Nolan was also mindful of those silent film mechanics, the way a story was told when perhaps you cant hear the dialogue. Or there is little of it. And with the lack of attention for Nolan’s screenplay currently, I assure you it is integral, be it a blueprint, to the film’s appeal.

All the while Nolan maintained that he, his characters, would not explain everything that was happening during the course of the movie. Something he did in abundance in his films Interstellar and Inception. Those narratives needed it. Knowledge is overheard and assumed, during those life-threatening, horrific times the movie depicts. Nobody really knows, not even the high ranking officers. The events at Dunkirk were pivotal moments in the war, in hindsight. And those soldiers on the ground, at sea, in the air, had no idea at the time they would be making such a cornerstone of history. And Nolan imprints this in his pages throughout.

In a near-50-year period, only a handful of Original Screenplay winners have defeated Best Picture winners. This includes one of the greatest, Paddy Cheyefsky’s Network (1976), and two that still raise eyebrows to their complete absence from the Best Picture nominations – The Usual Suspects (1996) and Almost Famous (2000). And let’s not forget those kids Ben Affleck and Matt Damon winning for Good Will Hunting in 1997 where Titanic could not compete. Similarly in 2013 when Gravity won a barrage of Oscars with no Screenplay nod. They said it couldn’t win Best Picture with no screenplay nod. That “rule” will be broken again.

Unbeknownst to many, then, that don’t consider Christopher Nolan’s screenplay for Dunkirk to be worthy of a Oscar nomination, he busted guts reading accounts, watching documentaries, spending hours and hours with historical advisers, survivors. Many of which helped work on the film. Nolan wanted to import a true sense of the spirit of soldiers in that matter of life or death. Pulling it all together, with the very personal experience his own grandfather had. He died young in the war, and both Christopher and his brother Jonathan would visit his grave often during the making of Dunkirk. A poignant reality that would flow into his script. Their dad would be able to tell you the type of plane from just the sound of it going overhead – just like the character played by Mark Rylance.

A further element of genius within Nolan’s screenplay is the three-fold narrative. Clearly imposed on the big screen for us (and in the script) as The Mole – One Week, The Sea – One Day, The Air – One Hour. And uniting those chapters incredibly. Believe me, the mechanics of those time-shifts, a Nolan trait, would have involved hours of scene-swapping. Nolan’s screenwriting journey was vast, even the ending his changed last minute. With the flaming plane from the original script closing the action, he went back to Tommy’s face. The look of personal contemplation at what had just gone by. Dunkirk is a superb screenplay. Nolan’s writing of action between dialogue is snappy, flawless, capturing so much of the ambiance of the humanity and dilemmas of war he envisaged so strongly. Even before he fully slipped on his directorial cap.

Author: Robin Write

I make sure it's known the company's in business. I'd see that it had a certain panache. That's what I'm good at. Not the work, not the work... the presentation.

5 thoughts on “For Your Consideration: Christopher Nolan, Best Original Screenplay, Dunkirk

  1. Totally agree that Nolan had one of the best screenplays this year. Story design is as much an element of a screenplay as dialog and the three POV stories woven together is no easy feat as they occur simultaneously. Like your analysis, Robin

    1. Absolutely. People equate little dialogue for less of a quality screenplay. Dunkirk is highly praised for its time-zones, and that comes from the words on page.

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