Around the third hour of a very long movie, something changes. The moving stops. You keep the phone in your pocket. Now you want to know what will happen next instead of how much time is left. That moment, which was quiet and hard to see, could be the most honest thing happening in movies right now.
Christopher Nolan’s version of Homer’s Odyssey has been getting the kind of press attention that studios used to pay millions of dollars to get. Critics of the movie are calling it an amazing feat. The word “flawless” keeps showing up in reviews. This is the kind of language that critics only use once or twice every ten years. People who see the movie will decide if it lives up to those expectations, but the main point is already clear: people are willing to go see something long, hard, and old. That will to do something says more about where we are than any box office number.
For years, most people have thought that audiences are broken. Attention spans were cut short by that streaming. That people born after TikTok couldn’t even make it through a two-hour movie, let alone a four-hour one. There is a version of that story that may be partly true. There’s another, less talked about version, where the same generation that watches 30-second clips also binges on eight-hour documentary series and watches six-hour Twitch streams nonstop. It was never really about length. It was about whether or not something deserved the time it asked for.

Gen Z seems to have a special kind of patience that they only use sometimes. They quickly scroll past content that doesn’t deserve their attention. Content that actually works for it — that builds something, that has a reason to exist — gets watched all the way through, shared, rewatched. That difference is very important, but Hollywood has been slow to grasp it. In the past ten years, studios have shortened movies, streamlined plots, and cut out anything that didn’t move quickly. Some of those instincts were good. But somewhere along the way, the industry got quality and efficiency mixed up, and people eventually noticed.
It’s not a coincidence that The Odyssey is becoming popular again. Homer’s poem has been around for three thousand years because it doesn’t easily fit into a short space. What does it cost to get home when home keeps moving? This is a story about being tired, longing, and getting home. David Denby wrote in The New Yorker that there has never been a great work that was so focused on physical pleasure and pain—hot baths, good food, and the simple violence of survival. It’s hard to put that texture into 110 minutes. Most people say Nolan didn’t try to.
That being said, streaming might have actually made this possible. Not by making expectations smaller, but by making them bigger. Years of long, complex, and novel-like prestige TV taught a generation of viewers how to keep things interesting for hours at a time. People don’t always want something smaller than what they get at home when they finally go back to the theater. They want something that makes them want to get up from the couch. If it’s told well, a four-hour movie can do that better than a two-hour franchise movie sometimes.
It seems like something is slowly and quietly getting back in balance. Not really a rejection of the quick hit, but short-form content isn’t going anywhere, and no one is arguing that it should. Still, an understanding that length, when used honestly, can add a weight that shorter work just can’t handle. The New Yorker said that The Odyssey has been frustrating filmmakers for decades, drawing them in with its size but showing them every shortcut they tried to take. Some people are calling Nolan’s version a possible triumph, which means he dealt with the problem head-on instead of avoiding it.
As I watch this happen, I can’t help but think that audiences were never as fragile as the industry thought they were. They were just waiting for something important to come along.
