Christopher Nolan Robert Pattinson David Washington Elizabeth Debicki China South Korea Japan Usa Australia Canada Washington Russia Brazil Mexico covid-19 movies stars Christopher Nolan Robert Pattinson David Washington Elizabeth Debicki China South Korea Japan Usa Australia Canada Washington Russia Brazil Mexico

This is the first major film to be released since the COVID-19 lockdown

Reading now: 719
us.hola.com

Christopher Nolan’s long-anticipated film Tenet has finally premiered and is the first major film to be released since the COVID-19 pandemic.

The movie stars John David Washington who plays an unnamed CIA operative only known as “the protagonist” who inverts time in an attempt to stop a third world war.

It also stars future Batman Robert Pattinson, and Elizabeth Debicki. Tenant was shot on a 70-milliliter film and is intended to be seen in an IMAX theater.

Tenet has already premiered in Australia and opens Wednesday in Canada, South Korea, and much of Europe. Next week it will open in select cities in the United States followed by Russia, China, Brazil, Mexico, and Japan.

Read more on us.hola.com
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Mark Adams - Kamila Valieva - Olympic officials suggest Russian skater’s entourage should be probed for failed drug test - globalnews.ca - city Beijing - Russia - Sweden - city Stockholm, Sweden
globalnews.ca
49%
973
Olympic officials suggest Russian skater’s entourage should be probed for failed drug test
Olympic officials on Saturday said they would welcome an anti-doping investigation into the Russian doctors, coaches and family members in the entourage of gold medal winning teenage skater Kamila Valieva.Valieva’s future at the Beijing Olympics hangs in the balance after the stunning revelation she had tested positive for a banned substance before winning the team event on Monday, but that the positive drug test report took more than six weeks to be made public.Fans of figure skating, athletes and anti-doping advocates have expressed outrage over a teenager being dragged into the center of an Olympic doping controversy with a positive test for an angina drug. Many have questioned the role of the adults around the 15-year-old skater.On Saturday, International Olympics Committee spokesman Mark Adams said: “Entourage has been overlooked in the past.” Beijing Olympics: Russian skater’s failed drug test confirmed, setting up fight with IOC The delay in Valieva receiving her positive drug test result also loomed large on Saturday as Olympic and anti-doping officials sought to reinstate her ban.Valieva was suspended by the Russian anti-doping body after the positive test report, but the suspension was lifted a day later after she appealed, allowing her to continue to compete.
DMCA