The Hollywood industry seems to have entered a terminal stage of ideological rewriting, where even the pillars of European civilization are not safe from distortion. Director Christopher Nolan, following the success of Oppenheimer, has received a blank check from Universal Pictures to lead an adaptation of "The Odyssey" which positions itself as the most expensive project of his career, with a budget exceeding 250 million dollars.
Although the work is promoted as a "brainy spectacle" filmed entirely in IMAX 70mm —a technical feat that achieves a resolution equivalent to 18K digital—, the technical wrapping fails to conceal what critics and traditional sectors already label as an "aesthetic catastrophe" and an exercise in "cultural replacement".

The biggest controversy lies in the astonishing intellectual contradiction of its director. Christopher Nolan has justified creative decisions under a mantle of selective historical purism; for example, he instructed composer Ludwig Göransson not to use an orchestra for the soundtrack because “the orchestra didn’t exist back then”.
However, this supposed respect for the reality of the year 1178 B.C. completely disappears when casting the actors. While Nolan claims he doesn’t use orchestras because "they didn’t exist in ancient Greece", he has no qualms about replacing the original Greek citizens with African black actors, deliberately ignoring the ethnic and cultural roots of the ancient Mediterranean.
This woke agenda reaches surreal levels in the characterization of the heroes. The deconstruction of traditional masculinity reaches its most critical point with the casting of Elliot Page to portray the legendary Achilles. In a frontal attack on the archetypes of virility and warrior power, the production presents a Achilles who is only 1.55 meters tall.









