Every one of Christopher Nolan’s movies is a big hit; that’s a given.
But anyone who has watched one of the director’s long movies can tell you that the music can sometimes be a little hard to hear.
Fans of Nolan’s Batman movies will remember how angry people were when they couldn’t understand Bane’s speech in The Dark Knight Rises.
The sound quality of his new album, Oppenheimer, seems to have received the same amount of attention.
The World War II movie has received praise from both critics and fans since it debuted last month. Nolan and his cast have been singled out for praise.

But some people have asked questions because they say the conversation is hard to follow.
Now, one reason why the sound isn’t as good as it could be is because Nolan shot it with big Imax cameras, which are not silent.
Nolan told the magazine Insider, “There are some technical changes. Imax is actually making new cameras right now that will be even quieter.
“But the real innovation is the software that lets you block out the noise from the camera. Since I’ve been using these cameras for about 15 years, that has changed a lot.
“Which gives you the chance to do more personal scenes that you couldn’t do before.”
Nolan told the outlet that he didn’t use Imas cameras for the scene between Cillian Murphy’s J. Robert Oppenheimer and Gary Oldman’s President Truman in the Oval Office because it would have been too noisy.
But if you look at Nolan’s work as a whole, he says that he likes to use Imax cameras because they make his work look more real.

Most movies add speech after they are made, but the maker of “Inception” likes to keep the original sound.
“I’d rather use the performance that was given at the time than have the actor do it again later,” he said.
“Which is an artistic choice that some people don’t agree with, and that’s their right.”
Some people may not agree, but the sound problems don’t seem to have changed the reviews.
Rotten Tomatoes says that reviewers gave the movie a 93 percent rating, and fans gave it a 91 percent rating, which isn’t too bad.
One reviewer said of the movie, “Oppenheimer is not only an epic masterpiece but also one of the most important movies of the year.”