Anupama Chopra sits down with Matt Damon and Tom Holland for InFocus, as Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey — the first Hollywood feature shot entirely on IMAX film — arrives in theatres. Matt reveals what it took to sustain raw emotion inside the constraints of a nearly 400-pound blimped IMAX camera: three-minute film loads, a mirror system Nolan devised so actors could hold eyelines they couldn't physically meet, and a crew that reloaded mid-scene with such quiet reverence that, in his words, it felt like being in church. Tom admits he held the emotion together by the skin of his teeth, but says every challenge felt worthy because what Nolan was attempting had been impossible until this film — and that no set piece was ever allowed to overshadow the emotion. The conversation widens into risk and legacy. Matt describes the film as the culmination of everything he has learned as an actor — a role that has existed for three thousand years — and recalls Nolan telling him that while Steven Soderbergh and David Fincher advise doing a small one, he'd rather swing big while he still can. Responding to Nolan's now-famous New York Times line that the biggest risk of all is to play it safe, Matt explains why success breeds the urge to protect your beachhead and why artists must actively choose against it, while Tom says leaps of faith are exactly what get him up in the morning. They close with an affectionate portrait of Nolan's famously unsentimental "Yeah, right, good, let's move on" — and why, for Tom, the drive to impress him paid off when the director finally told him how happy he was with his work. The Odyssey is in theatres worldwide. #TheOdyssey #MattDamon #THRIndia