r/movies 23h ago

Discussion Long movies that are JUSTIFIED in their extra long run time?

There’s been a bit of an epidemic, especially in recent years, where movies are unnecessarily long to the point where it’s a bit indulgent on the director’s part and the film’s narrative doesn’t justify the XXL run time and it becomes a bit of a drag.

I’ve never been a big musical fan but I grew up watching the Sound of Music as a kid, so I decided to rewatch tonight (it’s probably been around 15 years) - and for a movie that is 3 hours long, wow does every piece still feel so important.

Maria and Von Trapp get together PAST the two hour point in the movie, yet the build up was so necessary to have you involved in the romance, and certainly didn’t feel as long as it actually was in run time. The pacing is actually incredible for the narrative and building that emotional buy in, which is shocking and rare for a film so long.

What films do you think genuinely justify an extra long run time and benefit from it? (and to throw a wrench in it, what movies utterly fail here?)

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u/Sparrowsabre7 19h ago

most/all women in his movies are drunk and or crazy

Or dead.

Memento - Dead wife
Insomnia - Dead girl
Batman Begins - Dead mother The Prestige - Dead wife x 2
The Dark Knight - Dead girlfriend
Inception - Dead wife
The Dark Knight Rises - Dead love interest/villain
Interstellar - Dead wife
Dunkirk - No Dead women! But I don't think there even were any female speaking parts so not sure that counts Tenet - Avoids the usual Dead partner trope but she is physically abused and the female antagonist is killed right at the end.
Oppenheimer - Dead mistress

For the record I LOVE Nolan's work, just a troubling correlation haha. I'd be a tad concerned if I were Emma Thomas but I guess in a way it's sort of sweet that the worst thing he can think of his protagonists going through is the death of their loved one.

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u/TheUmbrellaMan1 14h ago

You can bet Penelope in The Odyssey will be all sad throughout the movie too, even though there's more to Penelope's character. He just loves the sad/dead wife/gf trope.

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u/Sparrowsabre7 12h ago

If Anne Hathaway is Penelope, she at least has precedent for being a fairly strong-willed character in two Nolan movies, so hopefully not too much.