Summary

  • The ending of Tenet is open to interpretation and may require multiple viewings to fully understand the intricate details and connections.
  • The word "Tenet" has multiple meanings within the film, such as referring to the repeated mantra of "what's happened, happened" and the organization that hires the protagonist.
  • Tenet follows a palindrome structure, moving forward in time for the first half and then reversing back to the start, with a focus on inversion and the manipulation of time.

The ending of Tenet has meaning that could be lost on a viewer after only one viewing of the movie. How did The Protagonist (John David Washington) and Neil (Robert Pattinson) really meet? Does the ending mean that time can be changed or did it create a grandfather paradox? Who was moving forward and backwards (and doing what) in the final battle? What was Sator's (Kenneth Branagh) plan and what did the future humans want? What do the silver capsules really do? Who fired the first inverse bullet shot during the opera opening sequence? And does this really set up a Tenet 2?

Christopher Nolan's eleventh feature film, Tenet is less a spiritual sequel to Inception than it is a culmination of the three movies he released in the decade since. The first half is set up for the spy story, not the inversion premise, yet when time reverses in the second half Nolan assumes viewers are fully up to speed and dives right in without pause to recap. Christopher Nolan is confident that the basics of Tenet are clear and viewers will go along for the ride even if they don't grasp everything - an approach that is key to understanding the true disorientation of its message.

Related: Tenet's Timeline & Time Travel Rules Explained

Every Tenet Meaning Explained

John David Washington in Tenet poster running

The word "Tenet" has a number of meanings and none were even remotely explored in Tenet's strange marketing campaign. In typical use, it means a principle or belief, which transferred to the film suggests it refers to the repeated mantra that "what's happened, happened," and the fundamental requirement that in order to interact with inverted objects, there has to be some faith or instinct involved. In-universe, Tenet is the organization that hires The Protagonist (and also Ives and his soldiers), and who operate against the mysterious future antagonists to make sure the Algorithm continues on its path backward through time.

Another potential Tenet meaning is found in the symbolic hand gesture that appears a few times throughout the movie. The interlocking of fingers with the thumbs up symbolizes the merging of the past and present, and it is used by The Protagonist to spot other believers in Tenet. The hands are mirror images of one another, and the visual symmetry reflects the mirroring allusion seen throughout the movie. The fact that the fingers fit so well together is also a clue about how time melds into one singular flowing thing.

Then there's the symbolic "Tenet" meaning, which fits in with Nolan's structure of Tenet. Through the film, the number 10 appears repeatedly - there's a ten-second warning on the free port's security failsafe, The Protagonist asks for ten minutes with Sanjay Singh and most importantly, the final mission takes ten minutes. That final mission is also temporal pincer movement, with two separate teams operating simultaneously, one moving forward through time and one backward with synchronized ten-minute countdowns. "Tenet" is, of course, ten running forward and backward and ing in the middle. It is also part of the key Sator Square that informs much of the plot

Is Tenet About Time Travel?

Tenet Movie John David Washington Protagonist

Not entirely. At least not in conventionally accepted that most time travel movie fans will be used to. Rather than using a time machine to jump to fixed points in time, Tenet's technology runs time backward, like a clock simply running anti-clockwise. There is no means by which the characters can leave one point in time and arrive somewhere else entirely without traveling backward for the required amount of time. Nobody could travel back 200 years, in other words. No cowboys here. And jumping forwards in time is impossible in any way other than following the usual age of time, so no flying cars or hoverboards. Basically, this isn't Back To The Future.

What Is The Sator Square?

A composite image of John David Washington and the Sator Square in Tenet

The Sator Square is a Latin palindrome made up of five words that can be read backward, forwards, upwards or downwards. It is a perfect expression of a complex palindrome, so naturally, Nolan uses it for the basis of Tenet's plot. Each of the five words forms a key part of the story: Kenneth Branagh's billionaire Russian villain is called Andrei SATOR; who hid his time turnstile at the free port operated by ROTAS and whose wife Kat had an implied affair with an art forger with the name of AREPO; Sator attempted to steal the Algorithm at the OPERA and TENET attempted to thwart it.

The original square is something of an ancient conundrum defying conventional translation, and it seems Nolan used those clues to suggest that no matter which way you read the movie, a Tenet meaning could be derived in multiple ways. The pleasure is in the experience.

How Is Tenet A Palindrome?

Tenet Movie Protagonist John David Washington

Before trying to untangle the web of what the Tenet meaning could be, having a clear view of what actually happens in Tenet. Simply put, Tenet is a palindrome: it moves forward in time for the first half, then reverses back to the start. It begins with an undercover mission in Kyiv, Ukraine that sees The Protagonist saved by a mysterious masked man with a red toggle on his uniform before he's recruited to Tenet and sent on a mission to uncover the Algorithm (a weapon developed by the future to reverse the flow of time) to prevent the end of the world.

The Protagonist undertakes two heists before Sator shoots his wife and gets away with the weapon, prompting The Protagonist to go back in time to reverse the murder, try and recover the final piece of the Algorithm, and then finally to stop the Algorithm being buried under a detonated bomb in Russia. Crucially, at the point of reversing time, The Protagonist goes back through mirror scenes of what came before - a motorway heist, the airport heist, and finally a major military set-piece to retrieve the Algorithm in which his life is saved by a mysterious soldier. It is, effectively, the same forward as it is backward.

How Inversion Works In Tenet

The Protagonist wears an oxygen mask in Tenet

Without delving too deeply into complex physics, Tenet (which has no such consideration) explains inversion is the process through which a formula can be applied to any object (whether innate or biological) to reverse its entropy or in other words, its movement through time. Uninverted people experience time linearly, as they parallel with the flow of time, but an inverted object moves backward.

Accordingly, an inverted bullet is not fired by a gun but ingested by it, a car drives backward, waves break first and then form in reverse, and inverted people can't breathe non-inverted air as lungs can't take it, so they must carry their own oxygen. The formula was developed by a future scientist who weaponized the same formula and turned it into a nine-piece physical formula that combined would reverse the flow of time: the Algorithm.

What Is The Algorithm And How Was It Recovered?

john David Washington as The Protagonist in Tenet

Like Inception, which revolutionized sci-fi movies on a scale Tenet deserves to, the key to the plot is the future scientist who creates the formula to invert objects and applies it to weaponize her technology and allow for a physical weapon to be sent back through time to destroy the past. When activated, the Algorithm is capable of inverting the flow of time itself, rather than a single object, leading to a catastrophic event that would end humanity.

Regretting her invention, the unnamed scientist broke the Algorithm into nine parts and hid them at different points throughout time to stop the future enacting their plan to destroy the world. Each part was turned into a physical object that could be slotted together to make the final "formula".In of how it was recovered from its hiding spots through time, only the ninth piece of the Algorithm is missing at the start of Tenet. Kenneth Branagh's Sator has recovered the others, suggesting that whoever he is working for has been able to uncover the locations of the other eight pieces (presumably by getting it out of the scientist somehow).

Related: Tenet Cast Guide: Where You Recognize The Actors From

What Was Sator's Plan And What Did The Future Humans Want?

Keneth Branagh looks angry in Tenet

At first, Sator is motivated by the riches sent to him by the past, but the final third of Tenet reveals that he is dying and he is willing to sacrifice the world alongside his own death. As he so theatrically puts it "if I can't have it, no-one can." Why the future wants to destroy its own past is actually more justified: it's a response to modern humanity destroying the planet beyond the point of redemption through environmental impact. It is implied that the future is a dystopia where the planet is dying to such a degree that the only answer is to turn back time.

When The Protagonist asks whether destroying their past would wipe them out, Neil introduces the idea of the grandfather paradox, suggesting that "what happened, happened". A grandfather paradox determines that it would be impossible for a man to travel back in time to kill his own grandfather because he would then never have been born to travel back in time. As Neil puts it, there is no solution, it is an unsolvable paradox. In other words, it's impossible to suggest whether the future would cease to be if it wiped out its own present.

Why Was Sator Chosen To End The World?

Kenneth Branagh Tenet (1)

As the film confirms, it seems that Sator was hired by the future simply because he was in the right place at the right time. Sator grew up in one of Soviet Russia's Closed Cities - Stalask 12 - and was charged with recovering scattered nuclear warheads and finds a note from the future along with gold bars telling him where to find each of the Algorithm pieces. They also send him the means to build a turnstile so he can invert himself and uninvert the gold sent back to him to aid him on his journey.

Related: Tenet's Inversion & Reverse Time Travel Explained

What Are The Closed Cities?

People run through a closed city in Tenet

The idea of Closed Cities is introduced in Tenet by Sir Michael Caine's character Sir Michael in his single scene as a British Intelligence agent who es on some key exposition over a posh lunch. He tells The Protagonist that Sator hails from the Closed City of Stalask 12, part of the Soviet-era program that involved settlements in which travel was restricted that housed sensitive operations and were populated by the families of those working in the bases or labs. Not labeled on maps, these mysterious locations were the foundation of the Soviet nuclear program and most were only discovered on the crumble of the Soviet Union.