Christopher Nolan doesn’t do things by halves, and his latest film, The Odyssey, might be his most technically audacious project yet. The reason isn’t just the mythic source material or the ensemble cast — it’s the camera that captured every frame.
According to the film’s stars, the production leaned on an IMAX system nicknamed Keighley, a 15/65 film camera built for professional motion picture work. If those numbers don’t mean much on their own, the physical reality certainly does: the rig tips the scales at roughly 400 pounds. That’s not a camera you casually sling over a shoulder — it’s a piece of industrial cinematic hardware that demands a crew, a plan, and a great deal of muscle.
The 15/65 format refers to 65mm film running horizontally across 15 perforations per frame, the same large-format approach that gives IMAX its trademark clarity and enormous negative area. It’s the gold standard for capturing scale, detail and depth that smaller formats simply can’t touch. For a story built on oceans, monsters and sprawling ancient landscapes, it’s an obvious — if punishing — choice.
What makes The Odyssey stand out is the commitment: Nolan shot the film entirely in IMAX. That’s a rare feat. Most productions that use IMAX cameras reserve them for select sequences, precisely because the equipment is so heavy, so loud, and so unforgiving to work around. Shooting a whole feature this way turns every setup into a logistical exercise, and the cast has been candid about just how imposing the machinery felt on set.
- Format: 15/65 film — large-format 65mm running horizontally
- Nickname: Keighley
- Weight: around 400 pounds
- Use case: professional motion picture production, not consumer gear
It’s worth being clear about what this is: Keighley is industrial film production equipment manufactured by IMAX for professional cinematographers. You won’t find it on a store shelf or a preorder page. But for anyone fascinated by the machinery behind the movies, it’s a reminder that some of the most cutting-edge imaging tech on the planet still runs on physical film — and still weighs as much as a small motorcycle.
Nolan has long been one of celluloid’s most vocal champions, resisting the industry-wide slide toward all-digital capture. The Odyssey reads like the fullest expression of that philosophy: a film shot end to end on the biggest, heaviest, most demanding format available. Whether audiences notice the technical distinction or simply feel the sheer scale on a giant screen, the effort is baked into every frame.
When it arrives in theaters, it won’t just be a retelling of Homer — it’ll be a showcase for what large-format filmmaking can still do when someone is stubborn enough to carry 400 pounds of camera to set every single day.