Speaking of Nolan, how about some criticism from my end. Let's change it up.
There are fans who think he's the Kubrick of his generation. I've read this before, especially during the Interstellar era. "Oh this is the
2001 of the 21st century". No. It is not.
Sure, they're two directors with great imagination and it's always an exciting event when Chris puts out a new movie, but
Nolan doesn't treat the audience with the same respect. He's more concerned with making sure ALL audiences can enjoy the ride, no matter how complex the ideas are (or how simple). Even though Jessica Chastain will go on record saying the opposite. I love that woman but i have to disagree with her. Chris isn't on Kubricks level. Why is that? The guy makes some of my favorite "blockbusters" today. But what's his weakness??? EXPOSITION.
Kubrick would never explain things to the audience in the way that Chris does. I don't mind it in Inception because i find Nolan executes those scenes in an entertaining way, between the characters. They're going into the dream sharing blind. But in Interstellar, they already have the skills. They're scientists. They should know what a wormhole is. Nolan is trying to hold our hand, explaining things to us because he doesn't trust that we're getting it.
Characters often think out loud in his movies. To tell us what they're feeling.
Following is a good example of him spoon-feeding throughout, with characters constantly telling each other what it is that they do. It's like "here are the themes, you dumb modern audience. I won't show them to you, ill tell you them."
Point: I think Nolan is slowly becoming a more cerebral (but not without emotion) version of Spielberg. Not anything like Stanley Kubrick. My beef with Spielberg is his safe, Hollywood way of ending everything in a big happy bow even when it doesn't make sense. Steven is too concerned with keeping the audience happy, feeling good when they leave the theater. Nolan doesn't give a s**t. His endings are bolder than that. But Nolan's issue is with making sure the audience understands everything. Two greats who have flaws.
Who would you compare Nolan to, from the past? And to each of you, who is your favorite director of all-time and/or working today? No need to answer if you're not a big film guy/girl.
