“He’s Like an Independent Filmmaker but at Scale” - Matt Damon Explains What Makes Working With Christopher Nolan So Unique

Credit: Universal Pictures
Credit: Universal Pictures
Matt Damon compared Christopher Nolan to an independent filmmaker working at a massive scale, capturing exactly what makes their collaboration so distinct. The Odyssey has kept audiences and critics talking well before its release, and the reason traces back to the kind of vision only a director like Nolan can bring to a story this ambitious. Damon offered real insight into that vision, revealing why the film carries the shape and energy it does on screen.
While Damon broke down the director's method in vivid detail, the description revealed why his sets feel so effortlessly alive.
Matt Damon breaks down Christopher Nolan's process on The Odyssey set
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Matt Damon answered the Christopher Nolan question directly, comparing him to an independent filmmaker working on a full scale. Speaking with Ashish Chanchlani, Damon explained that Nolan gathers every element he needs, from rowing crews to massive ships, before deciding how any of it gets used.
"I think what makes it unique is, he's like an independent filmmaker, but at scale. And so, he gathers all of the elements that he'll need," Damon said.
He added, "He gets there, and then he looks at the performance and always with the idea of the story in mind, and what's the best way to keep the audience engaged emotionally."

CHRISTOPHER NOLAN and CILLIAN MURPHY in OPPENHEIMER, 2023, directed by CHRISTOPHER NOLAN. Copyright UNIVERSAL PICTURES.
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN and CILLIAN MURPHY in OPPENHEIMER, 2023, directed by CHRISTOPHER NOLAN. Copyright UNIVERSAL PICTURES.
Damon added further context during the same conversation with Chanchlani, recalling how Nolan builds scenes only after watching actors perform in real conditions. He pointed to Interstellar as an early example, describing crampons dug into a glacier in Iceland while massive elements shifted into place around him without warning. Having now completed three films with Nolan, Damon called the process consistently organic, crediting it for the authentic, unplanned energy that ends up on screen despite the elaborate scale involved throughout production.
That same organic intensity extended off-camera, too, as Damon faced one of his deepest personal fears head-on.
How Matt Damon worked through claustrophobia on The Odyssey set
Beyond the technical scale of Christopher Nolan's process, Matt Damon confronted a lifelong claustrophobia while filming The Odyssey. According to a recent PEOPLE interview, the actor was repeatedly confined inside a massive, enclosed Trojan Horse while two jet engines blasted freezing fake rain across the set. Rather than avoiding the discomfort, Damon leaned into it, using the physical intensity to bring raw tension to his portrayal of Odysseus, the battle-worn king struggling to return home to Penelope.
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Credits: Universal Pictures
Credits: Universal Pictures
The experience marked real progress for Damon, who has also spoken openly about a fear of heights dating back to a 2004 helipad visit in Dubai, along with a well-documented fear of snakes from filming We Bought a Zoo. He told PEOPLE he worked through several fears during The Odyssey, adding that claustrophobia felt largely behind him now. That willingness to face discomfort mirrors the very approach Damon credits to Nolan, an independent filmmaker's mindset applied on a massive scale.
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What are your thoughts on Matt Damon comparing Christopher Nolan to an independent filmmaker at scale? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Aliza Siddiqui
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