As The Odyssey nears release, here are six Christopher Nolan films best known for their mind-bending twists.
Christopher Nolan has spent more than two decades building a reputation few directors can match. His films fold time, bend reality, and hide their biggest surprises until the final minutes. Whether he is working with a small budget or a blockbuster one, the goal stays the same: give the audience a puzzle worth solving.
What sets his movies apart is structure. Nolan rarely tells a story in a straight line. He plays with memory, dreams, and timelines, and he trusts viewers to keep up. That trust has paid off, turning complex ideas into massive box office hits and earning him an Oscar for Best Director.
With The Odyssey arriving in theaters July 17, it is a good time to revisit the films that made his name. Here are seven Nolan movies known for their mind-bending twists. Quick heads-up: spoilers ahead.
1. Memento (2000)
The film that put Nolan on the map. Memento follows Leonard, a man with short-term memory loss who is hunting the person who killed his wife. The story runs partly in reverse, forcing viewers to piece events together the same confused way Leonard does. The gut-punch comes at the end, when it is revealed that Leonard himself caused his wife’s death, a truth he can never hold onto. Based on a short story by Nolan’s brother Jonathan, it stars Guy Pearce, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Joe Pantoliano.
2. The Prestige (2006)
Two rival magicians in 19th-century London push each other to dangerous extremes. Nolan built the whole film like a magic trick, with a setup, a misdirection, and a final reveal that shuffles the identities of the two leads. It is often called his most twist-heavy movie, and it has only grown in reputation over the years. The cast includes Hugh Jackman, Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Scarlett Johansson, and David Bowie as inventor Nikola Tesla.
3. Inception (2010)
A team of thieves steals secrets by entering people’s dreams, moving through layers of the subconscious to plant a single idea. The film turned a complex concept into a global hit, earning around 800 million dollars worldwide. Its final shot, a spinning top that may or may not topple, became one of the most debated endings in modern film. Nolan has said it works as a cliffhanger, not a twist. It stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Elliot Page, Tom Hardy, Marion Cotillard, and Cillian Murphy.
4. Interstellar (2014)
A former pilot named Cooper leaves a dying Earth to find humanity a new home among the stars. The film opens with his daughter Murph noticing a “ghost” pushing books off her shelf. By the end, Cooper learns that he was the ghost all along, sending messages back through time from inside a black hole. It was Nolan’s first film with cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema, who also shot The Odyssey. The cast features Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, and Michael Caine.
5. The Dark Knight (2008)
Less about a final twist and more about constant misdirection, this one reshaped the superhero genre. Batman faces the Joker, a villain with no clear plan beyond chaos, who stays several steps ahead the entire film. The shifting schemes and moral traps keep the outcome uncertain until the last act. It stars Christian Bale, Heath Ledger in his Oscar-winning role, Aaron Eckhart, Gary Oldman, and Michael Caine.
6. Oppenheimer (2023)
Nolan’s most awarded film trades sci-fi for history, following physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer as he leads the race to build the atomic bomb. There is no last-minute reveal here, but the film keeps its grip through structure, splitting the story across two timelines and two perspectives, one in color and one in black and white, that slowly click together to expose a quiet betrayal. It swept the Academy Awards, winning Best Picture and Best Director. The stacked cast includes Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., Matt Damon, and Florence Pugh.
7. Following (1998)
Nolan’s debut, shot on a shoestring budget, already showed his love for pulling the rug out. A young writer starts trailing strangers on the street, then gets pulled into something far more calculated. The final reveal shows he was being manipulated from the start, and the timeline suddenly snaps into place. It is rough around the edges, but the Nolan trademarks are all there. The small cast is led by Jeremy Theobald and Alex Haw.
The Odyssey lands July 17, and it may or may not carry a twist of its own. The story of Odysseus is roughly 3,000 years old, so most viewers already know how it ends. The bigger mystery is how Nolan will structure it, and how a cast led by Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, Tom Holland, and Zendaya will bring the ancient epic to life on IMAX screens.
Missed your favorite Nolan movie on this list? Let us know in the comments below.

