Oppenheimer Movie Review: One Of Christopher Nolan’s Finest Yet (2024)

Director: Christopher Nolan

Writer:Christopher Nolan

Cast:Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt, Florence Pugh, Matt Damon, Rami Malek, Jack Quaid, Dane DeHaan, Robert Downey Jr, Josh Peck

Runtime: 182 minutes

Available in: Theatres

OppenheimerMovie Review

A bomb explodes, the death toll is in the thousands and there’s a chance the planet might catch on fire, but inOppenheimer(2023), director-writer Christopher Nolan’s screenplay traces destruction at a smaller, more subatomic level — the systematic ruination of a single man. For all its shots of sprawling landscapes, this is a movie that largely plays out in a series of rooms, moving from rooms in which scientists achieve greatness, to one lonely room in which a scientist falls from grace. Emulating the fission reaction that triggered the atomic bomb’s explosion, this is a screenplay that traces a cascading chain of consequences – a proposal made at a dinner party, a humiliating public remark, a critical action delayed too long – and the ripples of their aftermath.

Oppenheimeris one of Christopher Nolan’s most staggering achievements – a thudding, thrilling, tremendously intimate story about a scientist who sometimes can’t see his own greatness, often can’t see past it, and tragically, can’t persuade people to believe him when he does. The director’s films have, in some way or the other, been about men attempting to exert control over vast cosmic forces so much greater than they are – time, science, space – and reckoning with the repercussions of their actions. Over his past few films, he’s broadened his focus, moving from individual obsession to widespread planetary destruction – climate change inInterstellar(2014) andTenet(2020). Oppenheimerfuses both his thematic preoccupations, the end result an alchemy of one man’s quest for scientific advancement, and the wielding of a power he can’t control, holding the Earth to a lit match.

The Trinity of Three Tracks

The film plays out in three major parallel tracks. The first chronicles J. Robert Oppenheimer’s evolution from stifled student to superlative scientist and director of the Manhattan Project. The second, set in the future, has him having to answer questions about his past ties to Communists. The third, filmed in black-and-white, follows Lewis Strauss (Robert Downey Jr.) during his hearing to become the US Secretary of Commerce. The film flits between an event, a retelling of the event, and the aftermath of the years into the future. We get the bomb. And the fallout. At the same time.

Questions posed in the future are answered in the past. The same sentence uttered to different people at different points in time is both, a promise and an accusation. Events are revisited and recontextualized with striking clarity.

The first half plays out like a series of rapid, choppy vignettes, each scene driving home a certain point about Oppenheimer's character or his circ*mstances. It’s effective, if a little unmooring. But this compressing of time and information also has its casualties. To read American Prometheus, on which the film is based, is to know that Oppenheimer’s wife, Kitty (Emily Blunt), was never really able to bond with their son through his life. To watch the movie, particularly a scene soundtracked by a child crying as Kitty drinks in the kitchen alone, is to just see a harried mother overwhelmed by the demands of domesticity.

Oppenheimer Movie Review: One Of Christopher Nolan’s Finest Yet (3)

How Oppenheimer Drops the Bomb

If the first half of the film is propulsive and urgent, the second is deeply sad. Having built up to the Trinity Test, the bomb trial before it’s dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the result is oddly anti-climactic. Frantic violins give way to silence and then a shockwave like a clap of thunder. There’s a large column of fire. On the whole, however, it’s less evocative than the worlds of light and fire that Oppenheimer envisions quantum physics to be like when he shuts his eyes.

But maybe that’s the point – Nolan isn’t interested in using the full scope of his technical prowess to bring fire and fury to the screen, to have the audience gaze in wonder at the sight before them, to present it as any sort of heroic spectacle or scientific achievement at all. It’s telling that the film’s most compelling stretches are those set in small rooms, in which conversations that determine who lives and who dies play out with a casualness that only reinforces their cruelty.

Having dispatched with the bomb test, the film turns its attentions to the impact it has on the physicist. The movie externalizes much of his torment. Is that clanging coming from inside Oppenheimer’s head? Is the thudding we hear the sound of his heart? A speech he gives later unfolds like a horror movie, his jubilant words at odds with his inner rumblings, his monologue interrupted by a piercing scream.

However, for a filmmaker so fond of playing with perception, there are limits to what Nolan lets the audience see. The actual Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings are never depicted, and it’s the scientist’s face the camera focuses instead on as he’s faced with the aftermath. It’s a complicated endeavour – to evoke pity for Oppenheimer and his guilt over the bombings, instead of pity for the bombings themselves. Murphy, skeletal, is a haunted paradox of a man who made a choice and must now live with the consequences. The film spends just as much time in the crags and ridges of his face as it does on the plains of Los Alamos.

The 10 Best Sets In Christopher Nolan’s Films

American Prometheus

How a scientist absorbed in splitting things down to their minutest elements could be so blind to everything else is a maddening mystery and the screenplay does a fine job of pointing out the blinkers around Oppenheimer’s piercing blue eyes. The film undercuts his self-sacrificial schtick by framing him as a man who says it’s too late to continue going down a road despite him having picked the path in the first place. Still, it induces pity for the scientist who is eventually subjected to a rigorous questioning of his loyalty to the country and his reputation is shredded down to its last atom. “The bigger the star, the more violent its demise,” a character says of the astronomical body, and the same is true of Oppenheimer.

So much of Nolan’s filmography is about time lost, moments left unseized, opportunities that have slipped by, but notOppenheimer. In presenting events and then flashing forwards, the director reveals truths that weren’t evident at the time. He reaches into the future to wring absolution and justice for his protagonist. He makes things right. Then, in one of his finest climactic sequences yet, he underlines how all it took was for one man to get it horribly, horribly wrong.

Oppenheimer Movie Review by Gayle

Cillian Murphy

Emily Blunt

Christopher Nolan

Rami Malek

Matt Damon

Florence Pugh

Jack Quaid

oppenheimer

oppenheimer review

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dane dehaan

josh peck

robert downey jr

oppenheimer movie review

Oppenheimer Movie Review: One Of Christopher Nolan’s Finest Yet (2024)

FAQs

Oppenheimer Movie Review: One Of Christopher Nolan’s Finest Yet? ›

'Oppenheimer' Review: Christopher Nolan Makes a Riveting Historical Psychodrama, but It Doesn't Build to a Big Bang. Cillian Murphy

Cillian Murphy
Cillian Murphy (born 25 May 1976) is an Irish movie and theatre actor. Murphy is known for his roles in Christopher Nolan movies such as Scarecrow in The Dark Knight Trilogy (2005–2012). He also appeared in Inception and Dunkirk.
https://simple.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cillian_Murphy
gives a phenomenal performance as J. Robert Oppenheimer
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Oppenheimer is a 2023 epic biographical thriller film written, directed, and produced by Christopher Nolan. It follows the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the American theoretical physicist who helped develop the first nuclear weapons during World War II.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Oppenheimer_(film)
, who oversaw creation of the atomic bomb, in a film that's ruthlessly authentic and, for much of its three hours, gripping.

What isn't accurate in Oppenheimer? ›

Finally, he got so fed up that he put chemicals in Blackett's apple. Oppenheimer's grandson has disputed the incident, saying there's no record of it. In the movie, Niels Bohr nearly takes a bite out of the apple, but that scene was invented for dramatic effect.

What is so special about the Oppenheimer movie? ›

The horror of the bombings, the magnitude of the suffering they caused and the arms race that followed suffuse the film. “Oppenheimer” is a great achievement in formal and conceptual terms, and fully absorbing, but Nolan's filmmaking is, crucially, in service to the history that it relates.

What did Einstein say to Oppenheimer? ›

Einstein did, in fact, tell Oppenheimer to give up his security clearance and walk away from government work. That scene in the movie is based on true events.

What is the twist at the end of Oppenheimer? ›

The film depicts Oppenheimer's realization that their creation could destroy everything they know, leading to a horrifying reckoning when the bomb is dropped. The final scene between Oppenheimer and Einstein reveals the tragic truth that their self-centered pursuit and arrogance led to the destruction of the world.

Why was Oppenheimer banned in Japan? ›

Oppenheimer, starring Cillian Murphy as the “father” of the nuclear bomb, was also criticised by anti-nuclear groups for failing to depict the true horror of the devastation the bombs caused in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Did John F. Kennedy like Oppenheimer? ›

Oppenheimer's scientific work was profound enough – in the eyes of President John F. Kennedy – that he should be held up in the same regard as those who did win Nobel Prizes. In 1963, President Kennedy decided Dr.

Why did people not like the Oppenheimer movie? ›

It focuses way too much time on Oppenheimer's pre-Trinity political activity and post-Trinity kangaroo trial without a satisfactory reason to do so. The 1st and especially the overly long 3rd act needed tighter editing and the movie would have been better for it.

Did anyone not like the Oppenheimer movie? ›

I didn't like Oppenheimer, I thought it was a completely unnecessary movie trying to squeeze a moral grey area out of something any normal person would agree is universally bad. Oppenheimer isn't confusing. It's pointless. However, hands off Inception and Interstellar as neither movie is confusing.

Is the Oppenheimer movie woke? ›

WOKE ELEMENTS

There are a lot of comments floating around in cyber-space that Oppenheimer is a pro-communist/anti-American film. However, I would argue that it's more accurate to say that it never fully commits to either of those propositions.

What was Einstein's IQ? ›

What was the IQ of Albert Einstein? Sources usually put his IQ at 160. The highest possible attainable IQ also hovers between the 160-170 range. But there have been people with a supposed IQ above 200.

What was Oppenheimer's IQ? ›

Oppenheimer's IQ is 135. This estimation assumes he would be among the top 1% of living physicists during his era. The estimation follows the methods and assumptions utilized for Albert Einstein, offering a credible insight into Oppenheimer's intellectual caliber.

Did Einstein and Oppenheimer ever meet? ›

Schweber), Einstein and Oppenheimer first crossed paths at Cal Tech when Einstein visited the institute in January 1932 during his worldwide tour from 1931-1932. Even after World War II, the two physicists were coworkers at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study.

Why was Einstein mad at Oppenheimer? ›

In reality, Einstein did not like Oppenheimer's personality and was a committed pacifist who came to regret his role in the creation of the Manhattan Project. Oppenheimer and Einstein had differing scientific beliefs, and Oppenheimer would not have asked Einstein for a second opinion on nuclear fission.

What happened to Oppenheimer's son? ›

Soon after his father died, Peter permanently moved to northern New Mexico to live at a residence his father had purchased years earlier, the Perro Caliente ranch, according to the AHF. According to the AHF, Peter still lives in New Mexico working as a carpenter and has three children: Dorothy, Charles and Ella.

Who betrayed Oppenheimer in the movie? ›

As we learn in the movie, one of the men behind destroying Oppenheimer's reputation was Lewis Strauss, played by Robert Downey Jr. in a career-best performance.

How accurate was Truman in Oppenheimer? ›

Technically, Truman's response to Oppenheimer is accurate to history. However, events unfolded differently than in the film.

Why was Oppenheimer so skinny? ›

He pointed out that the scientist had a slim frame due to his diet, which meant losing weight. "I had to lose quite a bit of weight, and we worked with the costume and tailoring," he said. "He was very slim, almost emaciated, existed on martinis and cigarettes."

Did Oppenheimer test the atomic bomb? ›

Concerns about whether the complex Fat Man design would work led to a decision to conduct the first nuclear test. The code name "Trinity" was assigned by J. Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory, inspired by the poetry of John Donne.

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