Christopher Nolan Avoids “Cartoony” POV for Cyclops With a Colossal 60-Foot Contraption in 'The Odyssey'

Published 06/26/2026, 11:41 AM CDT

via Imago

Fantasy has rarely looked so gloriously determined to ruin a sailor's itinerary. Homer's The Odyssey hurls Odysseus into a world where hypnotic Sirens sing ships to their graves, Circe casually transforms men into pigs, Scylla and Charybdis turn the sea into a death trap, and quarrelsome gods treat mortals like chess pieces. Then there is the Cyclops, the one-eyed giant who has spent centuries proving that hospitality can go spectacularly wrong.

Remaining steadfastly committed to practical spectacle in his film adaptation, Christopher Nolan is leaving cartoony flourishes behind, bringing the Cyclops through the unconventional help of 60-foot contraptions.

How Christopher Nolan pulled off The Odyssey's most colossal creature

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Christopher Nolan’s approach to bringing the Cyclops Polyphemus to life in The Odyssey, as revealed to Empire, avoids anything resembling a cartoony spectacle. Instead, he builds the creature through layered practical techniques, combining animatronics, puppetry, and a towering sixty-foot contraption designed to sell unbearable scale. The goal is simple: make mythology feel physically present, not illustrated.

“Not approaching it from a storybook or cartoony point of view, but really trying to be in there with Odysseus and his men,” Christopher Nolan told Empire, framing the sequence as immersive horror rather than fantasy decoration. The Cyclops is not treated as a mythic caricature, but as a living, breathing threat inside a confined and "aimed at trying to imagine: what would this be like in real life?"

Matt Damon described Bill Irwin’s involvement as crucial to the creature’s presence, with Irwin performing voices and sounds throughout the shoot. The sequence was filmed inside Nestor’s Cave in Messenia, where bees at the entrance and the overpowering smell from livestock added real discomfort. Christopher Nolan told Empire that the environment itself created an oppressive realism no studio could replicate.

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While Christopher Nolan could have taken the easier CGI route or leaned into AI-assisted storytelling like Michael Caine’s narration of The Odyssey, he has consistently proven that, if given the chance, he would happily crown himself the filmmaker of realism.

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Christopher Nolan approaches film sets with the seriousness of an engineer and the imagination of a world-builder, preferring massive physical environments over green screen illusions. His productions are designed to be touched, climbed, and lit for real, giving actors genuine space to inhabit. The result is cinema that feels physically anchored rather than digitally assembled.

Instead of relying on digital trickery, Christopher Nolan constructs elaborate practical systems that push filmmaking into engineering territory. The rotating corridor in Inception allowed real gravity-defying choreography inside a motorized 360-degree set, while Tenet used forced-perspective stage design and hand-painted extensions to create impossible architectural depth without visual effects shortcuts.

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His obsession with scale extends into startling real-world commitments that blur the line between set and reality. For Interstellar, Christopher Nolan cultivated approximately 500 acres of real corn, later selling the harvest at a profit, while The Dark Knight featured practical destruction, including a flipped truck and a real building explosion staged for maximum authenticity. Every choice reflects his commitment to tangible realism.

Universal Is Putting Its Faith in Critics Over Influencers for ‘The Odyssey'

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How impressed are you by Christopher Nolan’s effort to bring the Cyclops to life in The Odyssey? Let us know in the comments!

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Iffat Siddiqui

1068 articles

Iffat is an Entertainment Journalist at Netflix Junkie. A word wizard, she had the sorting hat smoke at the seams owing to her excellence in everything Hollywood and cinema until it finally declared that she belonged to the Royals, specifically Meghan Markle. Boasting over 300 articles (and counting), each one tastefully infused with the right mix of facts, wit, opinion, and essentially everything to make a perfect pop culture piece, she is the epitome of a trustworthy entertainment journalist.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

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