Christopher Nolan is about to release the most expensive film of his career, a $250 million retelling of Homer’s Odyssey, and Universal is throwing a global party to celebrate it. The victory lap runs through London, Paris, Mumbai, New York, Beijing, and Seoul. Six cities, three continents, endless red carpets. The one place conspicuously missing from the itinerary is the nation that gave the world the story in the first place.
Greece is not on the tour. Athens gets nothing. And the omission is not some minor scheduling quirk, because Nolan’s production knows exactly where Greece is.
Portions of the film were shot there, alongside locations in Morocco, Italy, Iceland, and Malta. Greece was apparently good enough to serve as a backdrop for the cameras, just not important enough to host a premiere, a press conference, or even a photo op.
A World Tour That Skips Home
The snub lands harder because of everything that preceded it. Matt Damon confirmed the expanded six-city itinerary himself, calling the campaign a big push. Seoul is getting its first Nolan visit ever, complete with a handwritten note from the director expressing his gratitude to Korean audiences. Mumbai marks the first time Nolan has ever premiered a film in India. These are deliberate, thoughtful gestures toward markets Universal wants to court. Which makes the silence toward Greece equally deliberate.
Greek voices have noticed. The Greek City Times, a diaspora outlet dedicated to promoting Hellenism, published an open letter to Hollywood and the film’s cast pointing out that the principal lineup includes not one prominent ethnic Greek actor, not one Greek-American performer, and not even a symbolic acknowledgment of the culture from which the story originates.
Their argument was never that every toga must be filled by an Athenian. It was that a living people with an unbroken language, faith, and heritage stretching back to Homer himself deserved some seat at the table when Hollywood monetized their founding epic.
Diversity for Everyone Except the Greeks
Here is where the hypocrisy becomes impossible to ignore. This is the same industry that lectures audiences endlessly about representation, authenticity, and honoring marginalized voices. Nolan cast Lupita Nyong’o in the dual roles of Helen of Troy and Clytemnestra. He cast transgender actor Elliot Page, reportedly as the Greek soldier Sinon.
He cast rapper Travis Scott as a bard, explaining that oral poetry is analogous to rap. Every casting decision was defended in the language of creative reinterpretation and modern perspective.
Nyong’o went further, telling interviewers that Homer’s epics spend too little time in the perspective of women and praising the film for correcting the ancient poet. Consider the arrangement being offered here. Hollywood takes Greece’s most treasured literary inheritance, critiques its author, recasts its heroes, films in its landscape, and then celebrates the finished product everywhere on earth except Greece.
Representation, it turns out, is a one-way street, and the Greeks are standing on the wrong side of it.
The backlash has been substantial. The film’s trailer racked up hundreds of thousands of dislikes, and Universal has reportedly tightened early screenings to approved critics only. None of this guarantees the movie will fail, and Nolan remains a genuinely talented filmmaker. But talent does not excuse contempt, and skipping Greece while premiering in Beijing communicates contempt as clearly as any press release could.
Scripture speaks directly to this kind of selective courtesy, the habit of paying tribute where it profits us and withholding it where it costs us nothing.
Render therefore to all their dues: tribute to whom tribute is due; custom to whom custom; fear to whom fear; honour to whom honour. — Romans 13:7
Honor was due to Greece. Homer’s descendants asked for nothing more than acknowledgment, and Hollywood could not spare even that. When The Odyssey opens on July 17, audiences will decide whether a story about a man fighting desperately to get home was well served by a studio that could not be bothered to visit the home where it all began.


