Mementobecame an early example of the kind of twisting, innovative narrative thatChristopher Nolanwould become partially known for with movies likeInceptionandTenet. The Guy Pierce-starring mystery thriller would go on to be a defining moment for Nolan and his brother, screenwriterJonathan Nolan, but the latter revealed that it could have all been very different considering the initial reaction to that film.

Premiering in 2000, the Nolans’ groundbreaking film defied traditional structure to tell its story in reverse. Based on the short-story by Jonathan,Mementosees Pierce playing Leonard, a former insurance investigator who suffers from short-term memory loss. Only able to remember his wife’s murder, Leonard goes about finding those responsible and exacting revenge.

memento-movie-poster.jpg

Although Christopher Nolan would mirror some ofMemento’s storytelling techniques in his Oscar-winningOppenheimer, the screening reactions were not very promising at all. Jonathan Nolan told Josh Horowitz’sHappy Sad Confusedpodcast:

So we screened it for everyone, all on the same day, March of 2000. I took Chris out for a steak. Emma [Thomas] went to one screening, [producers] the Todd sisters went to another, Aaron Ryder our producer went to a to a third, and they called me on my old Nokia cell phone. Chris and I were waiting for the hosannas…the calls came in and no one wanted to buy it.

instar50304053.jpg

It started with Harvey Weinstein and all the rest. … We screened it for all these movie theaters and we get completely blanked. No one wanted it and the response from all of them was, “Oh I thought it was great.” “Okay well how much do you want to offer?” We would have taken not a lot of money. And the answer was, “I get it, but the audience won’t get it.” And there was such contempt for the audience.

This is really what motivated a lot of my career and a lot of the way I’ve approached my career. There’s such contempt for the audience, that the audience was a bunch of f—–g idiots. So they wouldn’t get it. And I thought to myself, “God I’ve met some of these executives. What makes you think you’re that much smarter than the audience? Cause you’re not.”

instar53775524.jpg

Memento Is Christopher Nolan’s Joint-Best Movie, According to Rotten Tomatoes.

AlthoughChristopher Nolan has delivered several impressive moviesin his career,Mementosits at the top of the pile, along with his sophomore Batman outing,The Dark Knight. Although it wasOppenheimerthat won him numerous awards, and a box office worthy of the accolades,Mementoremains his top-rated movie according to both audiences and critics on Rotten Tomatoes, with both scores sitting at 94%.

AlthoughMemento’s box office did not bring in the kind of money thatThe Dark Knightdid ($1.006 billion), it was still a huge box office success in terms of profit. Made on a budget of around $5 million, the film ended its run in cinemas with a gross of over $40 million. While the director would go on to receive a much higher amount to play with on his subsequent films — like the $100 million ofOppenheimeror the staggering $185 million forThe Dark Knight-Mementois a solid reminder that sometimes it doesn’t take a big budget to make an outstanding movie.

instar50021198.jpg

Jonathan Nolan Thinks Video Games Are Better Than Most Movies These Days

In an exclusive chat with MovieWeb, Fallout creator Jonathan Nolan discussed the emergence of video games as a “more interesting” medium than movies.

While Christopher Nolan is expected to make hismovie remake of 1960s TV seriesThe Prisonerhis next project, Jonathan Nolan is currently watching his latest project, Prime Video’sFalloutseries, earning plenty of praise. All in all, things are looking very good for the Nolan brothers — not bad for a pair who believed that their first big hit was destined to fail.

instar52898714.jpg

Mementois currently available to stream on Peacock.