Struggling to follow Christopher Nolan’s Tenet? We break down the science of entropy and inversion so you can finally make sense of the temporal pincer.

Don't try to understand it. Feel it. It’s not a jump to the past; it’s a rotation of how you experience the world.
Von Columbia University Alumni in San Francisco entwickelt
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Lena: Have you ever watched a movie and felt like you needed a PhD just to follow the opening credits? I’m thinking of Christopher Nolan’s *Tenet*. It’s been over five years since it hit theaters, and people are still scratching their heads over those silver Saabs un-crashing themselves on the highway.
Jackson: Oh, absolutely. It’s easily his most divisive work because it’s so dense. But there’s this one line early in the film where a scientist tells the Protagonist, "Don't try to understand it. Feel it." That’s the skeleton key. Most people get hung up on the "time travel" of it all, but the movie actually argues that time isn't moving backward—the people are just oriented differently.
Lena: Right, like they’re swimming against a current that everyone else is floating down. It’s not a jump to the past; it’s a rotation of how you experience the world.
Jackson: Exactly! It’s about entropy, not magic. So let’s dive into how this "inversion" actually works and why that "feel it" mantra makes the whole puzzle click.