Universal beat out several major studios to back the project after Nolan chose to exit his 19-year, career-long, exclusive relationship with Warner Bros. (It held international rights on Paramount’s “Interstellar.”) When WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar made the surprise December 3, 2020 announcement that the studio’s 2021 slate, including IMAX-bound “Dune,” would open day-and-date in theaters and on HBO Max, Nolan was done.

For the Oppenheimer project, top studio executives (who did not include Warners) drove to Nolan and producer Emma Thomas’ Hollywood Hills home office. There, they read the script at the offices of Nolan, followed by their best pitches on how to come through for the filmmaker. Nolan’s demands were the same for every studio, including Apple: his Warners deal, which includes final cut and 20 percent of the gross. Besides, Donna Langley had been wooing Nolan, a fellow Brit, for years. Langley first joined Universal Pictures in 2001 as a senior production executive, rising in the ranks from production president and co-chairman to chairman. Her track record and taste are impeccable, from banking on the “Fifty Shades of Grey” and “Downton Abbey” franchises and Oscar wins for “Green Book” and “BlacKkKlansman,” to keeping the “Fast and Furious” franchise on track, even during the pandemic: “F9” beat out all Hollywood releases in 2021 with $714 million worldwide. Langley also knows how to nurture original filmmakers, from Jordan Peele to M. Night Shyamalan, and always keeps creatives in the loop on decisions about marketing and distribution. Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

The question is how Universal will handle releasing Nolan’s somber period drama in theaters. The studio’s theatrical windows agreement with the top chains dictates all movies that gross over $50 million on their opening weekend receive an exclusive theatrical window of 31 days — at least five full weekends in theaters. All films that open under that benchmark are guaranteed a 17-day window, or three weekends in theaters. (The current studio norm is 45 days.) Universal has stayed flexible while adapting to the new normal. In Nolan’s case, expect the studio to go all out with IMAX and 70mm runs, as it did with Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Phantom Thread.” Bottom line: Universal will bend over backward to give Nolan the long theatrical run he demands — a reported 100 days — even if the somber period drama opens at $45 million or lower. (This runs the risk of opening that door for other filmmakers.) This deal reminds Hollywood that top talent will keep demanding exclusive theatrical releases — and will walk away to get them. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.

Why Chris Nolan Picked Universal to Back His Ambitious Atom Bomb Movie - 30