Nolan’s Odyssey filmed in occupied Western Sahara

Get the Culture newsletter
Daily culture — film, music, books, the trends and ideas worth your attention. Free.
- Christopher Nolan filmed scenes for The Odyssey in occupied Western Sahara, using the territory as a backdrop without seeking consent from the Indigenous Sahrawi people.
- Sahrawi people face imprisonment for filming under Moroccan occupation, while international crews like Nolan's are welcomed and granted access by the same authorities.
- Morocco uses foreign film productions to promote a sanitized, tourist-friendly image of Western Sahara, actively erasing Sahrawi culture and resistance.
- Western Sahara is a UN-recognized non-self-governing territory, where exploitation of land and culture without Indigenous consent violates international law.
- Mohamed Sleiman Labat argues that Nolan’s film perpetuates colonial extractivism by turning Sahrawi landscapes and suffering into cinematic decoration for Western storytelling.
Why it matters: The Sahrawi lose control over their land and narrative when filmmakers bypass consent, while the global film industry gains prestige—this normalizes occupation and makes cultural erasure profitable. International law is clear, but enforcement is absent.




