Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer Is an Intimate Epic About the Man Who Built the Bomb
It's a portrait of a complex man, and a warning about the nuclear era he created.

How does one judge a man whose chief contribution to the world was a weapon that killed hundreds of thousands of people, and which has now been enhanced to the point where it could kill millions or billions more? Even more to the point—how would that man judge himself?
Christopher Nolan's masterful biopic Oppenheimer, about the father of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer, offers a multiplicity of possible answers: He may well be a monster and a savior, a genius and a man incapable of reading other people, a compassionate friend and a callous careerist. He may see himself as a hero and as a villain, as a bystander and a central player in world events, as a scientist and a politician. In the movie's sprawling, prismatic view of the man and his work, no single answer applies—and perhaps all of them do.
Over the past two decades, Nolan has become one of the last eminences of studio filmmaking, the rare filmmaker who can command both gargantuan production budgets and audience attention for projects that are both original and deeply personal. But until now, even his most idiosyncratic films have been, essentially, thrillers and genre pictures: Nolan was making conceptually daring movies that toyed with notions of time and memory, but above all, he was making entertainment.
Oppenheimer is something else. It's an engaging movie, and a thrilling one, but it's more intimate than anything Nolan has done before, more personal in scope and focus. Oppenheimer ran the A-bomb project at Los Alamos in the 1940s, and thus he was simultaneously a scientist and a project leader, a sort of middleman between a rowdy bunch of genius academic engineers and a top layer of politicians and bureaucrats who would decide how to use their work. Fittingly, much of the movie takes place in cramped offices and cluttered classrooms, ordinary spaces made extraordinary because of the ideas that people had while occupying them. There are shots of vast landscapes and giant explosions, including a tense, awe-filled all-analog recreation of the Trinity nuclear test — but mostly the movie is concerned with faces, glances, the subtleties of human action. The film's signature image is not a nuclear explosion, but a close-up of the gaunt, angled face of Cillian Murphy, who plays Oppenheimer as a man haunted by his own mind.
But this isn't a turn to the domestic for Nolan. Instead, the director brings to bear the tools and techniques he's previously used to deliver bigger-than-life entertainment—only this time the story at the center is something far more consequential. The score by composer Ludwig Göransson, who previously worked with Nolan on Tenet, gives the movie a thudding heartbeat, so that even discussions of theoretical physics play out with a pulsing intensity. And, working with cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema, Nolan once again shot the movie on IMAX cameras, granting the images vast scale and detail.
The editing and story structure, meanwhile, retain the time-bending qualities of Nolan's previous work, as multiple timelines crash into each other and what initially seem like fragments of information come together to become clear. Nolan's movies have often been obsessed with the notion of memory—the falseness of it, the way jumbled recollections somehow amount to one's identity—but in Oppenheimer, it's not so much about crafting a puzzle box to be solved. It's about putting the viewer inside Oppenheimer's own mind space by capturing the world as he saw it, as he recalled it.
To the extent there is a puzzle box, it's Oppenheimer himself, but the movie doesn't offer a solution or anything approaching singular judgment. Instead, it wrestles with his complexities: his obvious genius, his affiliations with communism, his lust and affairs, his difficult marriage and his complicated work life, his willingness to build the bomb and his reluctance to see it used. It views Oppenheimer as both great and terrible.
And from that dual judgment, the movie casts its gaze to the nuclear-armed present that Oppenheimer left us. Nolan's movies—particularly Dunkirk and Interstellar—have often rallied around a spirit of can-do humanism, and a sense of awe at what man can build and accomplish in a vast and godless universe. But here that awe is leavened with fear and foreboding about the horror of full-on nuclear conflict in the wake of the nuclear bomb. Humanity is both great and terrible. Oppenheimer isn't just a movie—it's a warning.
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Will it be a blockbuster or bomb?
It will be gone from theaters is a flash, but will live on for generations on TV.
Quite the afterglow.
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How does one judge an individual . . . .?
With profound gratitude from this born-in-1948 boomer, whose father served in the U. S. Navy in the Atlantic from 1942 until discharge after the war, but whose ship was scheduled to transit the Panama Canal and participate in the invasion of Japan, prior to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Never mind that more Japanese would have died in either a crushing land invasion or a prolonged at sea embargo blocking the importation of everything . The Japanese could not even feed themselves, and what little food they could produce would have been destroyed by (conventional - non-nuclear) firebombing at the hands of Gen. LeMays' B-29's. Without the "bomb", many more Japanese would have died of either bullets or starvation, and more than a few would have learned how to cook "long pig".
And my father might well have died supporting the invasion at hands of a Japanese gunner or "divine wind" pilot, and I wouldn't be here at all. So, IMHO, stacking up a couple of hundred thousand dead "soldiers of the Emperor" (including civilians) against 1 possibly dead American who was my sire - well, it was they who declared sneak war on us and treated our POW's in the Pacific in the most inhuman of ways. Not a hard choice!! Sayonara, guchi no musuko tachi (さようなら、愚痴の息子たち)
That was then. I consider the Japanese to be desirable allies deserving of our support against Red China now.
I heard it's bombing in Japan.
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I can't wait to see the reaction to it.
Will it be controlled or uncontrolled?
It's off the chain.
I think it’s going to fissile.
Barbie and Oppenheimer's product were both introduced to the world in Japan.
To glowing reviews?
Enough to light up the night.
It made them feel warm and a little funny inside.
Not mentioned in the review is how it's a warning about the nuclear era he created. Every new technology has harmed some people and has had the potential to harm a lot of people, including nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. Every new weapon in history has harmed a lot of people, yet the human race as a whole continues to progress in large part BECAUSE of new technology. I doubt that humans need to be warned about the nuclear age and I hope that humans resist the temptation to try to squash new technological innovations despite "warnings" if this movie is a warning.
jeff welcomed the introduction of Fat Man with Little Boy.
Pluggo took pictures.
For reference.
Tokyo:
The US Strategic Bombing Survey later estimated that nearly 88,000 people died in this one raid, 41,000 were injured, and over a million residents lost their homes. The Tokyo Fire Department estimated a higher toll: 97,000 killed and 125,000 wounded. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department established a figure of 83,793 dead and 40,918 wounded and 286,358 buildings and homes destroyed.[28] Historian Richard Rhodes put deaths at over 100,000, injuries at a million and homeless residents at a million
Hiroshima:
(interestingly enough, Wikipedia does not report direct casualties of the attack)
Dead 66,000
Injured 69,000
The atomic bombs are bombs. Large ones, but bombs. They kill people and destroy property, like all bombs.
For those who like to whine about radiation effects, please do research into the deaths from disease and starvation following "conventional" bombings, where typhus, diphtheria and the like were rampant.
I do wonder if, when someone crosses the line and uses tactical nuclear weapons, the superpowers will lose interest in doomsday weapons. A tacit agreement to fight only with tactical nuclear weapons would allow the world's nations to go back to engaging in their favorite game of direct wars.
Dresden firebombing also killed 25,000.
Hamburg, even more.
If Oppenheimer hadn't helped create the bomb, someone else would have. Note the Germans, Italians and Japanese also had nuclear weapons programs, as did the British (and French before spring of 1940). After December 7th, 1941, Britain agreed to combine their program with the US program, rather than seek it on their own. The Soviets program was in its infancy (largely due to Stalin's purges). Germany was on the wrong track (many think due to Heisenberg deliberately misleading them, but they had some brilliant physicists who would probably have discovered the problem if Hitler hadn't decided to defund it largely in 1943 because Hitler, like with the ME-262 was shortsighted when it came to technology despite all his praising of superweapons). Japan had gone from firelock muskets and swords in the 1850s to a major industrial power that created the world's third (arguably second) most powerful navy (and prior to June 1942, arguably the strongest navy). So, if not Openheimer, someone else. Was it necessary to end the war? Probably not. But that wasn't Truman's calculation after Potsdam, it wasn't about ending the war but ending it before Stalin could fulfill his promise from Yalta, because Truman decided dividing up Asia like Europe had been would be a problem for decades to come. Unfortunately the time table didn't work out. And Truman proved profetic.
The Soviets program consisted of multiple spy leaks out of Los Alamos. I read Truman hinted to Stalin personally about what was going to happen in Japan, something Stalin was already aware of.
Just saw it, and Nolan does a fantastic job of explaining why “we have to build it before the the Germans”, from the viewpoint of the physicists. And historically accurate from what I remember from biographies I read years ago of some of those guys (Feynman, Bohr, Einstein, certainly Heisenberg).
There’s lots of nuggets for physics people in it (RPF and his bongos, a great discussion of the bomb detonating the atmosphere, etc), but it’s certainly a flawed movie. I couldn’t tell who Fermi was, and the Florence Pugh scenes are stupid. And it’s slow. I don’t predict a blockbuster, maybe even a flop.
Gary Oldman does a fantastic job of playing an asshole Truman, though.
It's my understanding that the Germans had abandoned creation of nuclear weapons for two reasons. First, they calculated that the war would be over before they could be developed and deployed. Second, because they knew their limited resources were urgently needed to keep the Wehrmacht going. (Third, possibly, because their best physicists were Jewish, who had emigrated or been silenced, and the remaining scientists were just not up to the task.)
There was a mention in the movie that Fermi was in Chicago for the Trinity test (I don't think he was on screen much in the film, and I don't remember him ever being addressed by name), but I was taught that he had somehow managed a very close estimate of the yield by seeing an object knocked off of a desk in the bunker at Los Al.
It definitely doesn't have the pacing of a 'Dark Knight" movie or "Tenet", but it's a biopic about a theoretical physicist focusing on more than a decade of his life and including scenes spanning 20-30 years of actual history. Nobody should be going in expecting to see a series of setpiece chase/combat sequences separated by bits of exposition.
To some extent, what hurt the Nazi physicists was their rejection of Einstein because he was Jewish and dependence on Max Planck because he was German.
How does one judge a man whose chief contribution to the world was a weapon that killed hundreds of thousands of people
Mikhail Kalashnikov?
Fritz Haber?
Cecil B. DeMille?
Habers wife killed herself ostensibly as a result of his developing gas warfare during the Great War.
Kalashnikov branched out to vodka later in life. Shitty booze, but came in a nice, glass, AK-shaped bottle.
Fauci?
*Applause*
John Moses Browning?
I mean, if you consider it was one of his that started WWI...
Once we knew about radioactivity and relativity, nuclear bombs were inevitable. Better that we had them first.
The biggest shame is the human race’s not making more use of the wonderful, positive technology of nuclear energy.
Yes indeed. I recall a few years back some Green group opposing research into ways to dispose of radioactive waste safely on the grounds that if the research was successful, then nuclear power would become widespread which was a bad thing because the waste is unsafe...moe-rons.
Proper disposal is still an issue.
Watched this a few weeks ago.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=McrytYdId5M&pp=ygUebnVjbGVhciB3YXN0ZSBzdG9yYWdlIHdhcm5pbmcg
Someone should probably explain to them that the billions of tons of extra coal ash their prevention of the U.S. nuclear buildout in the 1970s-80s led to can't really be disposed of either, and while it's not as intensely radioactive as spent uranium rods, its net radiation output might actually be greater due to the dozen or more orders of magnitude of extra mass/volume that it has compared to what a reactor produces. Also, another result of their efforts has been a 3x or so increase in total human CO2 emissions than we might have put out going back to the late 19th century.
I can’t watch a movie about nuclear weapons right now, with the real possibility of the Ukraine war escalating to World War III.
I’m dumbfounded there is a trend where people are going to see “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” as an unofficial double feature as a goof. Maybe it’s a form of whistling past the graveyard.
While watching “Oppenheimer” would make me anxious rather than entertained, I would have to be dragged kicking and screaming to “Barbie”.
You can always re-watch Dr Strangelove 😉
No, thanks. I have a Kubrick box set, and recently rewatched "Barry Lyndon" and "Eyes Wide Shut", but I just couldn't take watching "Dr. Strangelove" right now.
To me, 2001: A Space Odyssey and The Shining are both scarier than Strangelove.
The Shining is especially disturbing. As a kid, I sometimes rode my Big Wheel (I loved that thing) indoors in the winter. And as a young man, I found Shelly Duvall cute. And I dig less mainstream classical music like Kubrick used in the film. To this day, I can’t stay in a large hotel unless it’s near full occupancy.
Oh, man. At what age did you see “The Shining”?
I was probably 10 when I saw it the first time. Deeply unsettling.
Oh, my. That’s a bit young to be exposed to that.
It's hard for me to believe that anyone has any anxiety over the possibility of a thermonuclear war at this point. It's been hanging over our heads for three generations now. Nuclear weapons were actually used in a war once against real people and it's hard to see how the deaths in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were any worse than the deaths in Dresden, London or Coventry. Nevertheless, Mutually Assured Destruction is one of the few government policies in history that has actually worked as intended, although it only works so long as leaders like Putin don't turn out to be crazy enough to find destruction acceptable for their homelands. But there's nothing we can do about terminally insane madmen at the helm, so there's no point in worrying about it.
It’s been hanging over our heads for three generations now.
Part of the reason I have anxiety. It has been hanging over my head since I was a kid. I thought things had gotten better with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but fucking Putin was nostalgic for a world on the brink of World War III and thought he would bring all the risk back.
Should Chinese and/or Russian military bases dot the US border in Mexico, Canada, and in the Caribbean while those nations engage in genocide against citizens sympathetic to America it may become more clear why the situation is where it is. And there is not a history of the US being invaded whereas the west has attacked Russia including by Napoleon, in Crimea, by Kaiser Bill and that Austrian painter. Yesterday, Canada issued sanctions against a Russian rap artist so we know who the good guys are.
I'm not sure what most of that means, but "the west" never invaded Russia. Napoleon invaded Russia once and got his ass handed to him by the Russians about 200 years ago; and Hitler invaded Russia once 70 years ago and got HIS ass handed to him by the rest of "the west" and Russia. So no ...
Part of the reason I have anxiety. It has been hanging over my head since I was a kid. I thought things had gotten better with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but fucking
PutinBiden wasnostalgichiding his corruption for a world on the brink of World War III and thought he would bring all the risk back.FIFY.
'but fucking Putin was nostalgic for a world on the brink of World War III and thought he would bring all the risk back.'
Really, that's your concern? Not the reality of the proxy war our current administration is waging against Russia? You're such a dink.
Putin isn't the one that worries me, except in retaliation.
Write Biden and tell him to stop warbonering in eastern Europe. Khrushchev was wise enough to discontinue activities in Cuba.
Weak men lead to hard times.
When Nolan made the decision to adapt the Oppenheimer bio from a book into a movie, all that was happening in Ukraine was the ongoing low-grade civil war around Donbas that started in 2014 after the US State Dept helped Zelensky take power by running a foreign-funded propaganda operation (it's only "misinformation" when it's not originating on the orders of Dems) which was a big part of why Putin hated HRC as much as he did when 2016 rolled around.
I doubt that anyone had any inkling that Biden would dust off the playbook which served us so well in Vietnam and started sending weapons and "advisors" to help fuel an ever-expanding proxy war that can't be "won" by the side we're backing because it's a war of attrition against an enemy with far superior resources and willingness to expend lives. Half the White House staff and at least 30% of registered Democrats are still in denial about the prospects for Ukrainian victory without NATO getting directly involved (and even then, it might be unwinnable short of MacArthur's "total war" scenario which nobody really wins); some Dem loyalists are actually buying into the idea that full escalation is low-risk for our side because they believe that the Russian nukes haven't been well maintained and will just fail to work if a launch order is given. I'm not sure I'm ready to bet tens of millions of lives on that prospect, but OTOH rapid depopulation of the earth is possibly in their minds, also the only thing which can avert a disastrous extent of climate change (an I guess a nuclear winter somehow wouldn't count as man-made?).
Old timers will welcome a return to actors using dialog to move the story along; others will be looking for CGI produced explosions or naked people rolling in bed every five minutes and will be disappointed. I'm interested in how this and Barbie does in the second week of release.
It covers up that he, and a large portion of the federal government, was a fucking communist
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Regardless, I expect this film is giving a Hollywood History, which is guaranteed to be distorted and twisted due to the ideological bubble these people all exist within. That’s my presumption with any new product, and I need people to point out the rare exceptions where the film actually makes an effort to maintain historical accuracy.
So Oppenheimer invented The Bomb all by himself?
We were extremely lucky Enrico Fermi’s wife was Jewish. Really fortunate to have Chien-Shiung Wu on our side too.
The movie is very good about showing how Oppenheimer managed the project’s talented scientists and dealt with the military, and even spent some time on his original research before the war.
Yes but what does it have to do with race or climate change. Seems kind of irrelevant otherwise.
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I hope everyone will remember that Germany and Japan had their own Atomic programs . Hitler would have used it without restraint. Possibly Japan too .
Japan wouldn't have been able to deliver that large of a payload to the North American mainland other than Alaska or maybe northwest Canada. Even the smallest fission bomb is far heavier than the incendiaries they released on thousands of balloons to try to ignite the forests of the Pacific Northwest.
By 1945, they would have been left with hitting either Inda, China, or maybe at the farthest out, Australia. They couldn't have snuck a carrier from the home islands into the eastern Pacific, and probably didn't have an airstrip left from which they could reach Hawaii (midair refueling tech was still decades away).
The bomb gave my first glimpse on how stupid and controlling our government was. As a grade schooler in the 50's, the government had us do nuclear bomb drills where we were told the way to survive the bomb was to hide under our desks, if inside, and, if outside, to huddle next to the school building.
If they'd told you to just tuck your head under and kiss your ass goodbye, they'd seem incompetent.
Same as if they published the results of security "audits" where inspectors have a 70-90% success rate sneaking simulated weapons (and a 20-30% rate of getting 3oz of shampoo) through TSA checks at major airports. Or if they acknowledged the dozen or more studies done around the world which showed that cloth masks did literally nothing to slow the spread of Covid-19 (which spreads as an airborne virus and not just in "droplets", the same as pretty much every other known strain of coronavirus to affect humans), and that surgical masks were only marginally more effective.
Giving people rituals and talismans to believe will protect them in threatening events is good enough to get most people willing to accept that the Government has a handle on things and that when given more authority, they can "solve more problems"; pay no attention to how often their success at truly solving problems depends on their direct involvement in creating the danger to begin with...
Hat tip to Twitchy dot com:
Author and teacher (with pronouns in her profile), Tanya Roth. took to Twitter to share a 'fun fact' about the new movie 'Oppenheimer'. According to Roth, a woman doesn't speak for the first 20 minutes of the movie and then right away there is a scene with intimacy. Apparently, they should rewrite history and add inaccurate characters so Roth feels more comfy.
Tanya Roth (she/her)
@DrTanyaRoth
Fun fact: no women speak until 20 minutes into #Oppenheimer and then within a minute there’s a sex scene.
Tanya Roth (she/her)
@DrTanyaRoth
To add to this: no people of color appear for at least 30 minutes, and I believe there are 2 black men in the entire movie.
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