On Saturday, I spent a little over 3 hours at the movie theater with a friend, finally watching the widely-acclaimed Oppenheimer. It did not disappoint.
Okay, well, it disappointed a little. The beginning was very much a mess, in my opinion. Flashbacks of flashbacks, changing from color to black-and-white, moving from young Oppenheimer to an old, and there was precious little thread holding these scenes together. The infamous apple scene, in which Oppenheimer attempts to poison a mean professor but eventually thwarts his own plan after guilt overwhelms him, felt forced. I believed the director was trying to demonstrate the depths of Oppenheimer’s chaotic personality (by using an even that those close to the man claim never happened), but it came just a few minutes into the movie, after just one interaction with the intended victim, so it didn’t carry any weight.
The plot twist toward the end was also a little messy. There were so many major characters involved with names barely used that when the antagonist mentioned a couple by name as conspirators, I couldn’t quite remember who he was even talking about.
But aside from those grips and a couple other petty ones, I really enjoyed the film. Cillian Murphy as Oppenheimer and Robert Downey Jr. as Lewis Straus were simply brilliant. Emily Blunt also gave a masterful performance of Oppenheimer’s wife. None of these characters are very sympathetic, as they are all deeply flawed and selfish individuals, but the actors still did a tremendous job bringing them to life.
The scene of the Trinity test was one of my favorites, as Christopher Nolan did a tremendous job building up the pressure, including the actual countdown for the atomic blast. A little later, following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there is a scene where a deeply conflicted Oppenheimer delivers a congratulatory speech for the scientists who worked in the Manhattan Project where Nolan’s artistic vision was once again on full display with the combination of sounds and lighting.
I highly recommend this one for anyone with a taste for history. It doesn’t feel like a full 3 hours, and the resulting performance is well worth the time and money anyway. It wasn’t quite the cinematic coup de grace I was hoping, but I still give it a solid 4.5 out of 5 stars. Easily the best movie I’ve seen all year.
I learned about Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project years (decades) ago so I was intrigued by this film. I started reading American Prometheus before I went to see it. As with most movies like this, it suffers from trying to do too much and, in the process, doesn’t do enough. So many events and issues are barely touched on. It is a good movie, but left me feeling like the surface had only been scratched. I just finished the portion of the book dealing with the security clearance hearing. While the movie makes clear he was railroaded, there is soooooo much more detail in the book. Which isn’t unusual, of course.
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I’m definitely going to read the book, now that I’ve seen the movie.
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It’s quite a slog.
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You’d say the movie is historically accurate, aside from the apple incident?
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There are a few other things done in the name of dramatization but overall I think it’s fairly accurate.
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Thanks, Mark.
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From what little I know of Oppenheimer and the Trinity tests, it does seem accurate. In fact, for a lot of the Congressional hearing scenes, the dialogue is taken directly from transcripts.
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Good to know!
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