10 Harsh Realties Of Rewatching Oppenheimer, 1 Year Later

Summary

  • Oppenheimer is a complex and ambitious film, but this ambition creates a few problems.
  • While Christopher Nolan and Cillian Murphy deserve their success, Oppenheimer is not a perfect movie.
  • Oppenheimer has faced some of the same criticisms that Nolan’s other movies have had to contend with.

Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer is a brilliant biopic of the father of the atomic bomb, but a year on from its release, there are a few things that stand out. Oppenheimer faced several controversies upon release, but many of these have been summarily dismissed as Nolan’s movie has been received favorably. For example, there was some controversy over the movie’s omission of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, but this would not have fit in with the plot, and it could even have come across as insensitive if handled poorly.

Oppenheimer has stood up to most criticisms, and its awards-season success underlines its positive reception. Nolan’s unconventional blockbuster has its issues, however, as any movie with such lofty ambitions does. Some of these issues aren’t necessarily faults, but each decision that Nolan made with Oppenheimer closed the door to countless other possibilities. While it should still be considered a worthy Oscar-winner, Oppenheimer will continue to be dissected and re-evaluated for many years.

10 Oppenheimer Is Far More Interesting Than It Is Emotional

Nolan keeps a barrier between the audience and the protagonist

Close

Like most of Christopher Nolan’s other movies, Oppenheimer tells a fascinating story, and Nolan’s script is designed for maximum dramatic impact. However, while the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer is compelling and richly symbolic, Oppenheimer chooses to maintain a safe distance from speculating on the scientist’s emotional state. This allows Nolan to respect the historical context of the story without inventing too much drama out of thin air.

While the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer is compelling and richly symbolic,
Oppenheimer
chooses to maintain a safe distance from speculating on the scientist’s emotional state.

Cillian Murphy’s Oscar-winning performance as Oppenheimer is powerful due to its restrained lack of observable emotion. While Kitty and some of Oppenheimer’s colleagues urge him to show some fight, he remains a stoic victim in the eye of the storm. Nolan often lets Murphy’s gaunt visage fill the frame, but this is a cunning subversion of the Kuleshov effect, where the audience have to make up their own minds about whether he is feeling fear, rage or sadness.

9 Oppenheimer Doesn’t Have Time To Explore Each Character

Some enormous historical figures deserve their own biopics

Close

The cast of characters in Oppenheimer is filled to the brim with some of the most fascinating figures from the Second World War. As a biography about just one man, Oppenheimer doesn’t have the time to explore them all in depth. This is no weakness, since attempting to do so would be to overstuff the movie to the point of exhaustion, but it’s excruciating to see so many potentially interesting stories going to waste.

History buffs and science enthusiasts alike would no doubt be interested to see a little more from characters like Richard Feynman or Lilli Hornig.

History buffs and science enthusiasts alike would no doubt be interested to see a little more from characters like Jack Quaid’s Richard Feynman, the prankster of Los Alamos, or Olivia Thirlby’s Lilli Hornig, one of very few female scientists working on the Manhattan Project. In some cases, Christopher Nolan expects the reputations of these figures to do some of the heavy lifting. Audiences are meant to have preconceived notions about Albert Einstein and President Harry Truman, so the script doesn’t need to provide any more information.

8 Nolan Lets The Score Overpower The Dialogue

Nolan prefers to give a sense of a scene, rather than risking a lesser impact

Close

One of the most divisive elements of Tenet, and a few of Christopher Nolan’s other movies, is that the music can sometimes make the dialogue harder to hear. This is also true of Oppenheimer. Ludwig Göransson worked on both Tenet and Oppenheimer, and his score here has been rightly recognized for its importance and impact. There are times, however, when Nolan puts this lustrous score on full blast, to the detriment of the dialogue.

One of the most divisive elements of
Tenet,
and a few of Christopher Nolan’s other movies, is that the music can sometimes make the dialogue harder to hear. This is also true of
Oppenheimer.

This is no fault of Göransson’s; it’s simply Nolan’s decision-making about his priorities. Nolan famously eschews ADR, meaning that the dialogue in his movies is more organic, even if it isn’t always crystal-clear. Nolan always gives audiences enough detail to be able to follow the plot, but he prioritizes the emotion and the atmosphere of a scene rather than ensuring that every single word is audible.

7 The Movie Fails To Dig Into The Antisemitism That Oppenheimer Faced

Nolan may have been wise to omit this

Close

Christopher Nolan pays close attention to the true story behind Oppenheimer, but he does make one or two changes for the purposes of the movie. One thing that is glossed over in Oppenheimer is the ugly history of antisemitism that he had to deal with. While Oppenheimer became a more controversial figure in the years after the war, some of the attacks against him were fueled by hatred, and his Communist associations were merely used as a veil for antisemitism.

Nolan is certainly not the director for this side of Oppenheimer’s story, and Cillian Murphy is not the actor for it.

Nolan is certainly not the director for this side of Oppenheimer’s story, and Cillian Murphy is not the actor for it. Ultimately, Oppenheimer does a fantastic job of showing the way that the American political machine turned against the scientist without needing to focus on his Jewish heritage. It’s just one more side that shows the abject hypocrisy in the system, as the United States fought a war against Nazi Germany, but didn’t embrace the principles of racial equality.

6 The Monochrome Scenes Can Come Across As A Gimmick

Oppenheimer’s black and white scenes require some insight

Close

Oppenheimer uses a non-linear structure, so that the Manhattan Project is inextricable from its effects. Nolan shows the audience the victory and the disastrous fallout, the theory and the practice, all at once. For as much as the scientists wanted to approach their work like any other science project, Nolan seems to suggest that they cannot wash their hands of the destruction that their weapon caused.

It’s an interesting storytelling technique, but it’s hardly intuitive. If audiences aren’t clued-up to the meaning, it could be a jarring shift.

To delineate these scenes somewhat, Oppenheimer has some black and white scenes. Most of the scenes which take place following the war are “black and white” both literally and figuratively, as they represent an objective story which contrasts Oppenheimer’s personal recollection and interpretation of the color scenes. It’s an interesting storytelling technique, but it’s hardly intuitive. If audiences aren’t clued-up to the meaning, it could be a jarring shift.

5 Oppenheimer Loses Its Pace Toward The End

The editing keeps the three-hour runtime feeling relatively quick

Close

Although it’s three hours long, Oppenheimer feels remarkably brisk. Christopher Nolan keeps up a breakneck pace, fusing Oppenheimer’s personal life and his scientific endeavors into a compelling and holistic portrait. However, the entire Manhattan Project builds up to the Trinity test, and the movie can’t sustain its pace after this grand finale. The ending of Oppenheimer is still interesting, but it doesn’t feel as vital as the first two and a half hours.

The entire Manhattan Project builds up to the Trinity test, and the movie can’t sustain its pace after this grand finale.

Oppenheimer wouldn’t work without a detailed third act. This is the moment that knits together the plot lines which take place during the war and those which take place after it. It’s also important for the movie to show that, although the Trinity test and the end of the war felt like a grand triumph, life continued. After being lauded as a hero, Oppenheimer had to watch people turn against him just a few short years later.

4 The Female Characters Are Relatively Hollow

Kitty and Jean Tatlock aren’t as developed as some male characters

Close

Emily Blunt deserved her Oscar nomination for her portrayal of Kitty, Oppenheimer’s long-suffering wife, but her character isn’t quite as three-dimensional as his. Kitty often acts as an external conduit for Oppenheimer. She is allowed to feel the injustice that he faces, even as he remains an unmovable martyr. Her passionate defiance at the private security hearing shows everything that Oppenheimer would say for himself if he had the courage.

Kitty often acts as an external conduit for Oppenheimer. She is allowed to feel the injustice that he faces, even as he remains an unmovable martyr.

Both Kitty and Jean Tatlock are only seen via the effects that they have on Oppenheimer, while other characters have more complex motivations and their own stories to tell. Oppenheimer’s relationship with Jean is a microcosm of his work on the Manhattan Project, as it shows him following an intense passion that soon leads to destruction, both for himself and others.

3 The “Now I Am Become Death” Sex Scene Is Too Distracting

Oppenheimer misuses the scientist’s most famous quote

Close

Oppenheimer‘s most controversial scene when it first came out has not gotten any better. Christopher Nolan’s dialogue uses a lot of genuine quotes from Oppenheimer and his contemporaries, and it seems as though this constraint causes him to inject some more theatricality into conversations which are completely speculated. Oppenheimer‘s “Now I Am Become Death” sex scene is almost laughably distracting, and it seems utterly detached from the grounded tone of the rest of the movie.

Oppenheimer
‘s most controversial scene when it first came out has not gotten any better.

The scene uses Oppenheimer’s most iconic quote, which is taken from the Bhagavad Gita, but was famously spoken by the scientist in a TV interview years after the war. Even those who know very little about J. Robert Oppenheimer may have heard this quote at some point, so putting it into the sex scene is a strange choice. It foreshadows Oppenheimer’s feelings after the Trinity test, and it provides another link between the Manhattan Project and his relationship with Jean Tatlock, but it sticks out terribly.

2 The Chain Reaction Theory Is Blown Out Of Proportion

Oppenheimer manufactures a powerful finale

Close

Christopher Nolan saves one of Oppenheimer‘s best quotes for the very end, as Oppenheimer asks Albert Einstein to recall a conversation they had years ago about the possibility that the atomic bomb could destroy the entire world. It’s an undeniably powerful ending, but it lends more weight to the chain reaction theory than it deserves. In reality, this wasn’t a serious concern for most of the scientists at Los Alamos.

The chain reaction that Oppenheimer mentions in the ending refers to the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union.

The chain reaction that Oppenheimer mentions in the ending refers to the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union, as well as the persecution that he has faced. It also calls back to a theory first proposed by Edward Teller while working at Los Alamos, that the bomb could produce enough energy to ignite the world’s atmosphere. Most scientists, including Oppenheimer, saw this as unfounded.

1 Oppenheimer Is Not Nolan’s Best Movie

The British director has plenty of hits to choose from

Close

Christopher Nolan won his first Oscar for Oppenheimer, and it was arguably overdue, but that doesn’t mean that it’s his finest work. The debate over Christopher Nolan’s best movie ultimately comes down to personal taste, and plenty of people will choose Oppenheimer, but this is far from a consensus. Oppenheimer crystallizes many of the ideas which Nolan has been tinkering with throughout his career, although his other movies each have their relative strengths.

Oppenheimer
crystallizes many of the ideas which Nolan has been tinkering with throughout his career, although his other movies each have their relative strengths.

Oppenheimer takes the complex timeline of Memento, the World War II setting of Dunkirk and the scientific exploration of Interstellar. One could argue that each of these movies execute certain aspects to a better degree than Oppenheimer, and that’s not to mention the immense success of Inception and The Dark Knight. Oppenheimer is a flawed masterpiece, every bit as complex and untidy as the man who inspired it. Nolan’s ambition is admirable, but his Oscar-winner is by no means perfect.

Oppenheimer Poster Oppenheimer RDramaHistoryBiography Where to Watch

*Availability in US

  • stream
  • rent
  • buy

Not available

Not available

Not available

ScreenRant logo

Oppenheimer is a film by Christopher Nolan, which follows the theoretical physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, the man behind the atomic bomb. Cillian Murphy will play the titular role, with the story based on the book American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin.

Director Christopher Nolan Release Date July 21, 2023 Studio(s) Syncopy Inc. , Atlas Entertainment Distributor(s) Universal Pictures Writers Christopher Nolan Cast Cillian Murphy , Emily Blunt , Matt Damon , Robert Downey Jr. , Rami Malek , Florence Pugh Budget $100 Million Expand

Leave a Comment