Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterWhen Christopher Nolan signed on to direct 2014’s “Interstellar” for Paramount Pictures, he did so under one condition: Warner Bros.
would have to be involved in some capacity.Since “Insomnia” in 2002, Nolan has collaborated with Warner Bros., to at least some degree, on every feature film he’s directed — a list of critical and commercial smashes that include the Dark Knight trilogy, 2010’s sci-fi crime “Inception” and 2017’s World War II epic “Dunkirk.” The nearly two-decade long bond between the blockbuster director and the Hollywood studio has laid the foundation for one of the most successful working relationships in modern show business history.That union was rocked last week when Warner Bros..
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