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Tenet
Released 2020  /  150 min
Box Office: $363.1 million
Armed with only one word - Tenet - and fighting for the survival of the entire world, the Protagonist journeys through a twilight world of international espionage on a mission that will unfold in something beyond real time.
Time runs out.
John David Washington
The Protagonist
Robert Pattinson
Neil
1
Scene Stealer
Elizabeth Debicki
Kat
1
Worst Performance
Kenneth Branagh
Andrei Sator
1
Best Performance
Dimple Kapadia
Priya
Himesh Patel
Mahir
Aaron Taylor-Johnson
Ives
Michael Caine
Sir Michael Crosby
Clémence Poésy
Barbara
Martin Donovan
Fay
Andrew Howard
Driver
Yuri Kolokolnikov
Volkov
Mark Krenik
Toby
Anthony Molinari
Rohan
Rich Ceraulo Ko
SWAT / Target
Denzil Smith
Sanjay Singh
Jonathan Camp
SWAT 2
Julia-Maria Arnolds
Nanny
Laurie Shepherd
Max
Wes Chatham
SWAT 3
Fiona Dourif
Wheeler
Kenneth Wolf Andersen Haugen
Tourist in Oslo
Marcel Sabat
Gaunt Russian
Marek Angelstok
Usher
Klaus Peeter Rí¼í¼tli
SWAT #1
Daniel Olesk
SWAT #2
Bern Collaí§o
Posh Restaurant Customer (uncredited)
Ingrid Margus
Usher (uncredited)
Carina Velva
Tourist in Oslo (uncredited)
Glenn Lawrence
Russian Soldier (uncredited)
Katie McCabe
Flight Attendant Anne (uncredited)
Ronald Pelin
Art Gallery Employee (uncredited)
Schezaad Ausman
High Security Guard (uncredited)
Anterro Ahonen
Military Officer (uncredited)
Aleksei Podlesnov
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Lisa Marie
Soldier (uncredited)
Trent Buxton
Soldier (uncredited)
Jess Weber
Soldier (uncredited)
Jeremy Theobald
Steward
Jefferson Hall
Well-dressed Man
Adam Cropper
Young Andrei Sator
Josh Stewart
Male Voice
Juhan Ulfsak
Passenger
Jan Uuspíµld
Blue Co-Pilot
Jack Cutmore-Scott
Klaus
Kaspar Velberg
Police Operator
Sergo Vares
Police Supervisor
Rain Tolk
Policeman Passenger
Henrik Kalmet
Medic
Sean Avery
Red Soldier 1
B–
A
B
C
D
F
Music
Visual Effects
Acting Quality
Character Depth
Story Pacing
Originality
Sequel Potential
Re-Watchability
90% Drama
Comedy 10%
Violence
Espionage
Power
Time travel
Reviews
Probably Nolan at his worst. The action scenes are big and loud and visually stunning, but the exposition between the set pieces is absurdly convoluted. I'm not sure Washington knew what was happening in the film, perhaps by design. And in a movie with one female character, Nolan's script does Debicki no favors. The whole thing feels like a misguided Inception parody.