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Have you ever watched a movie, didn’t like it, and then wondered years later, "Was I just having a bad day?" That’s the big idea behind a series called Coming Around Again.
This series was started by a writer named Nick Rogers. Here’s how it works in simple terms:
Nick didn’t write anything for this series in 2025. But because the whole point is giving things a second chance (and because he jokingly admits he likes to finish what he starts, even if it’s painful), he decided to make it a monthly thing in 2026.
For every movie, his essay explains:
Important Point: The goal isn’t to be mean to old movies — it’s to ask honest questions like: "Did I have a bad day? Was I just too young for this story? Was the movie actually smarter than I realized?"
This time, Nick revisited two movies directed by Christopher Nolan.
The story made simple:
Two police detectives from Los Angeles (who are being watched by their own bosses for mistakes) go to a tiny town in Alaska called Nightmute. There, the sun never sets in summer. They help with a murder case. One detective (Pacino) accidentally shoots someone — and the killer (Williams) sees it happen. The killer then tries to trick the cop so he won’t go to jail.
The story made simple:
Around the year 1900, two magicians (Jackman and Bale) become rivals. They compete to build the best magic trick ever — one that makes a person disappear and reappear somewhere else (teleportation). Things get extreme.
Nick was just starting his first big-kid job as a newspaper reporter. It was a confusing, busy time. He saw Insomnia at a regular movie theater near his parents’ house.
By then, Nick had his job for four years and drove 3 hours round-trip to see movies in St. Louis.
Nick gives a few friendly reasons:
Important Point: Nick isn’t forced to watch these — he’s doing it to be fair to movies he may have judged too soon.
Nick still thinks the movie had everything going for it: great actors, a cool idea, and a director who’s good at mind-bending stories.
What he liked:
What he didn’t like:
Nick notes Nolan never again directed a movie he didn’t help write. Insomnia feels like a "tryout" so studios would let him make Batman movies.
Nick says it looks beautiful and has one amazing scene: David Bowie as inventor Nikola Tesla in a lightning field.
But the problems:
He ends by quoting the song at the end: "There’s no spark, no light in the dark." He says that fits.
Sadly, no.
Important Point: Even the best directors make a clunker sometimes — and that’s okay! It’s part of learning.
Nick Rogers brought back his Coming Around Again series to rewatch two Christopher Nolan films he didn’t like: Insomnia (2002) and The Prestige (2006). After seeing them again, he realized his first impressions were mostly right. Insomnia is a slow, uninspired remake, and The Prestige is a pretty but empty movie that feels like a practice run for Nolan’s later masterpieces. The big lesson? Giving movies a second chance is fun, but sometimes your gut was correct all along.
1. What does "Coming Around Again" mean?
It’s a series where Nick Rogers rewatches old movies he disliked or didn’t understand, to see if his opinion changes with time.
2. Why didn’t Nick write for the series in 2025?
He just didn’t add anything that year. In the second-chance spirit, he promised to do it monthly in 2026 instead.
3. Are Insomnia and The Prestige based on other works?
Yes! Insomnia is based on a 1997 Norwegian film. The Prestige is based on a 1995 novel by Christopher Priest.
4. Did Nick end up liking the movies more the second time?
Not really. He still found Insomnia middling and The Prestige pretty but empty, though more interesting in hindsight.
5. What’s the main takeaway from this revisit?
Even great filmmakers like Christopher Nolan have weak early movies, and it’s human (and okay) to miss the mark sometimes.