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Home » Christopher Nolan’s personal take on smartphones is surprisingly practical
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Christopher Nolan’s personal take on smartphones is surprisingly practical

By technologistmag.com12 July 20263 Mins Read
Christopher Nolan’s personal take on smartphones is surprisingly practical
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Christopher Nolan has spent his career embracing cutting-edge filmmaking technology while resisting one of the most common gadgets on the planet: the smartphone. The Oscar-winning director behind Oppenheimer, Inception, and the upcoming The Odyssey says his decision isn’t about rejecting technology altogether. It’s about protecting something he believes has become increasingly rare – time to think.

In an interview with The Telegraph ahead of the premiere of The Odyssey, Nolan explained that he still doesn’t own a smartphone, despite living in a world where QR codes, digital tickets, and messaging apps have become everyday necessities. His reasoning, however, is far more practical than philosophical.

Rather than fearing the technology itself, Nolan believes smartphones would consume the quiet moments that fuel his creativity. Those idle minutes while waiting for a train, sitting in an airport lounge, or arriving early for dinner are where many people instinctively reach for their phones. Nolan says that’s when he solves problems, develops scenes, and figures out the next step in a film. The Telegraph first reported his comments.

Nolan doesn’t hate technology – he just refuses to let it interrupt his thinking

Given Nolan’s reputation for championing practical filmmaking, many assume he’s anti-technology. The reality is far more nuanced. His latest film, The Odyssey, makes extensive use of visual effects alongside large-scale practical filmmaking, animatronics, puppetry, and in-camera techniques. Nolan has consistently argued that technology should support storytelling rather than replace it, a philosophy that’s evident throughout his work. During the interview, he also spoke about the industry’s growing fascination with generative AI, suggesting younger audiences have been surprisingly quick to reject what he described as obvious “AI slop.” According to Nolan, his own children immediately recognize low-quality AI-generated content because they grew up immersed in online culture.

That perspective extends beyond filmmaking. Nolan admits he deliberately avoids smartphones because he knows he’d become “horribly addicted” to endlessly looking things up. Instead of constantly consuming information, he prefers letting ideas develop naturally during moments of downtime. Ironically, he says the only technology that’s genuinely tested his resolve is the widespread return of QR codes since the pandemic, which has made life without a smartphone increasingly inconvenient.

A filmmaker who still values undistracted experiences

Nolan’s approach also shapes how he believes audiences should experience movies. He praised filmmaker Quentin Tarantino’s Vista Theatre in Los Angeles, where visitors are expected to leave the auditorium if they need to check their phones or smartwatches. Nolan called it a “wonderful rule,” adding that the cinema even pipes the movie’s audio into the restrooms so viewers don’t miss important scenes while stepping out.

His comments arrive at a time when smartphones dominate nearly every idle moment of modern life. Studies have repeatedly linked excessive phone use with reduced attention spans and increased digital distraction, while growing movements advocating “digital detoxes” continue to gain traction. Nolan’s stance isn’t that smartphones are inherently harmful – he simply believes they’re too effective at capturing our attention.

That philosophy also explains why he rarely responds to online rumours or social media speculation surrounding his films. Without a smartphone constantly demanding his attention, Nolan says he’s content letting the noise pass while focusing on the work itself.

For someone celebrated for making films about memory, time, and perception, perhaps Christopher Nolan’s biggest productivity hack shouldn’t be a new app or AI assistant. It’s protecting the empty moments most of us stopped noticing years ago.

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