I can’t find a thread for Christopher Nolan’s OPPENHEIMER so here you go

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he's around in all the scientist crowd scenes, but his views and actions aren't strongly characterized

symsymsym, Sunday, 23 July 2023 22:18 (two years ago)

there’s a book called “the martians” about the great hungarian physicists (szilard is the voice of conscience figure from that group which also includes teller). i could have sworn that was a movie too but i guess not. the cold war is obviously prominent but that’s definitely got a wider scope than atom bomb stuff

the late great, Sunday, 23 July 2023 22:30 (two years ago)

i’m posting this because in general i agree that a lot of the people and their stories are a lot more interesting than both oppenheimer and the usa military’s ambitions

the late great, Sunday, 23 July 2023 22:32 (two years ago)

lots of biopics get made tbf

admittedly all things considered id rather they focused on the later years after he became dr manhattan but i guess nolan is using that known outcome as background to impregnate the "how did Oppenheimer become dr manhattan" aspect with foreboding like he did with his movie about joaquin phoenix becoming batman

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Sunday, 23 July 2023 22:51 (two years ago)

To be fair, I think the argument for the tragedy in the last hour of the movie is less about him merely losing his security clearance, but that he lost it in the context of criticizing and urging caution. Whatever his mistakes were, and whatever his personal motivations were, there's at least some tragedy in the silencing of a voice of caution given the very dangerous nuclear arms race that happened next.

― fajita seas, Monday, 24 July 2023 6:24 AM (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

True.

One other mild sticking point for me. I am not convinced Ben Safdie was the right man for his role and was distracted in most of his scenes. I kept thinking the scientist he was playing was sounding a lot like the character he played in Good Times, which was a funny thought in itself and gave some nice levity.
There were definitely some Safdie-esque “stress scenes” that went far beyond Nolan’s previous levels. Big fan of those

hrep (H.P), Sunday, 23 July 2023 23:00 (two years ago)

this was not a great film, I’m afraid

brimstead, Sunday, 23 July 2023 23:31 (two years ago)

To be fair, Oppenheimer does seem like a faultless hero when you compare him to a vile sociopathic ghoul like Teller.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Monday, 24 July 2023 01:55 (two years ago)

I have agreed to portray the first person ever to talk about someone's mom while doing the dozens. 'YoMommaHeimer' will be in theaters in January.

— George Wallace (@MrGeorgeWallace) July 24, 2023

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 24 July 2023 02:27 (two years ago)

maybe the saddest part of this movie was when they read from the hearing transcripts and it was less stilted than all the other dialogue

micah, Monday, 24 July 2023 03:46 (two years ago)

Oh no not this again.

Any means of forcing Japanese surrender would have killed incredible numbers of civilians, the guilty parties are the imperial officials who insisted on continuing a hopeless war.

— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) July 23, 2023

xyzzzz__, Monday, 24 July 2023 09:44 (two years ago)

next day reflection is that my biggest disappointment in this is that Richard Feynman is reduced to a blink and you'll miss him bongo playing extra in the background.

stirmonster, Monday, 24 July 2023 10:44 (two years ago)

I didn't realise he was meant to be Feynman. I only knew he must be someone because I recognized Jack Quaid.

trishyb, Monday, 24 July 2023 12:10 (two years ago)

i didn't know it was Jack Quaid. i wonder if there was more of him that didn't make the final edit?

stirmonster, Monday, 24 July 2023 13:24 (two years ago)

the weirdest fact about jack quaid is that nobody ever references his innerspace remake from 1991

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Monday, 24 July 2023 13:32 (two years ago)

the weirdest fact about jack quaid is that nobody ever references his innerspace remake from 1991

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Monday, 24 July 2023 13:32 (two years ago)

the weirdest fact about jack quaid is that nobody ever references his innerspace remake from 1991

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Monday, 24 July 2023 13:32 (two years ago)

what's the weirdest fact about Jack Quaid?

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 July 2023 13:42 (two years ago)

he actually hates Billy Joel

hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Monday, 24 July 2023 13:58 (two years ago)

Tell him about it.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 July 2023 14:11 (two years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNumdLhDV2M

hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Monday, 24 July 2023 14:18 (two years ago)

is the "dropping of the bomb was necessary to save millions of lives" narrative still as prevalent as it once was?

I've always found it to be horseshit, but the Hiroshima thread on ILX was pretty mixed back in the day.

linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Monday, 24 July 2023 14:49 (two years ago)

This film suffered from bloody horrible audio mixing. I hate this new thing in film and TV where you can hear every foot shuffle, every jacket lining, even people breathing, to the detriment of dialogue

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Monday, 24 July 2023 15:04 (two years ago)

Blame the Foley Artist Union

hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Monday, 24 July 2023 15:14 (two years ago)

is the "dropping of the bomb was necessary to save millions of lives" narrative still as prevalent as it once was?

I've always found it to be horseshit, but the Hiroshima thread on ILX was pretty mixed back in the day.

I think even in the '90s, during the 50th anniversary coverage, America's mainstream was ambivalent at best, but maybe I was just selectively taking in the coverage

fair but so uncool beliefs here (Eric H.), Monday, 24 July 2023 15:18 (two years ago)

Admittedly my position was more emotional cos I'd read Hiroshima in school and was pretty shook by it

linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Monday, 24 July 2023 15:20 (two years ago)

i would say the question is as controversial and unanswerable as ever.

the facts are the japanese (branches of military, imperial court, civil society) were themselves at odds with each other over the question of surrender. meanwhile publicly they are calling for collective fight to the death, and at this point even avowed pacifists and anti war activists are getting into kamikaze fighters (semi willingly) to defend the home islands. so like in real life, people's stated motivations and their actions are confused and contradictory. on the other side, you can't fault the allies for starting to ask whether it was really going to be foxhole combat on a thousand little islands for another six months. and yes there is also debate in the us govt about whether dropping the bomb is necessary and whether they should just test it on people either way, while they can.

so this is real murky stuff because even in retrospect it's not clear why they did what they did. in real life henry stimson finally "agrees" to dropping the bomb on the condition that 1) it's not on kyoto or other cultural landmark site (overruling the army) and 2) it's out of humanitarian necessity and to get ahead of an inevitable arms race, and NOT simply just to see how well it works in a real life use case ... and truman respects not just #1 but uh ... also #2? but what does that even mean, since it ends up looking no different?

the late great, Monday, 24 July 2023 15:36 (two years ago)

Debates about the motivations of an event the killed hundreds of thousands of civilians indiscriminately always come off as a little misguided at best? I am Thomistic with my morality, believing that there is a balance between circumstances and intention when judging a moral decision. But this one? I think the gravity of the effect makes discussion of “intentions” shallow.

Just reminded me of another moment in the movie when my ears went red. When Stimson crosses Kyoto off the list and people in the cinema “laughed” at this moment. Maybe it was just the cinema crowd enjoying some gallows humour, but that was too much for me

hrep (H.P), Monday, 24 July 2023 23:52 (two years ago)

Also xp otm about audio mixing. How does Nolan get away with it? I was more forgiving on this one because, you know, I was comparing it to Tenet.

hrep (H.P), Monday, 24 July 2023 23:53 (two years ago)

today muscular liberalism is saying again, there are benefits to incinerating entire fucking cities!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:08 (two years ago)

uhhh the communists believe that too

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:20 (two years ago)

When Stimson crosses Kyoto off the list and people in the cinema “laughed” at this moment. Maybe it was just the cinema crowd enjoying some gallows humour, but that was too much for me

this is just ignorance (and maybe bad filmmaking). stimson had lived in kyoto with his family and did not want to see it destroyed

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:22 (two years ago)

do you guys have these thoughts about other parts of wwii also? they killed more ppl bombing dresden and tokyo (in one night!) than hiroshima

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:24 (two years ago)

that’s two separate instances

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:25 (two years ago)

of course I have thoughts about the fire bombing of civilians by the British and US in Germany and Japan - it was barbarism and mass murder and there should have been the strategists from bomber command and the US air force put on trail for crimes against humanity.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:34 (two years ago)

I was gonna say, do you know who you're posting to? lol (<3 calzino)

linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:38 (two years ago)

The laughing at the Kyoto comment was more on the crowd than the film, it wasn’t presented as a funny comment.
My opinions are not personal attacks on your positions the late great, I can appreciate what you are saying. But co-sign with Calzino. Just because the nazi’s/Japanese/communists were notthe good guys in that point of time, does not mean America gets to be by process of elimination. There are no winners in war, especially not innocent evaporates civilians. Woe to us who like the strategy room, make those lives part of a mathematical strategic equation by turning it into a trolly problem. Lives are worth more than that.

hrep (H.P), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:44 (two years ago)

*evaporated

hrep (H.P), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:45 (two years ago)

I visited Hiroshima maybe 7 years ago? Going to the peace memorial museum was an extremely emotional experience.

The only other time a history museum effected me in a similar way was when viewing a photo in Berlin’s topography of terror. It was a photo of German civilians being forced to look at a mass grave of concentration camp victims. The Germans are wailing in the photo while surrounded by US or USSR soldier.

hrep (H.P), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 00:57 (two years ago)

The thing I try to keep in mind is how Grave of the Fireflies was based on massive 'regular' bombing of Kobe.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 01:49 (two years ago)

wait am i giving the impression i think the us were the good guys? and in any case, is that the message of the film? i didn’t see it but i thought the movie was unequivocal about the bomb being bad?

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 03:15 (two years ago)

No you’re not giving that impression. The movie is about how Oppenheimer was a complex bloke, that he had a lot of grit and genius, that he was not particularly wise with his personal choices, and that he is haunted by his work and subsequently thrown away due being the weaker force in a U.S. policy battle regarding what to do with atomic power from here (curtail vs expansion).The movie is primarily about Oppenheimer, and only secondarily about the Bomb as it relates to Oppenheimer. The movie is no unequivocally about the bomb being bad

hrep (H.P), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 03:28 (two years ago)

ok yeah, make sense. i’ve already deleted several posts on the topic of the atomic bomb for a similar reason - the posts were about wwii and not oppenheimer, i assume they are ultimately tangential to this thread about christopher nolan’s oppenheimer movie

the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 04:01 (two years ago)

I think Shaq would do a commercial for genocide if the check was on time

— Trill Withers (@TylerIAm) September 28, 2018

we're so close to this

slai gorgeous-alexander (m bison), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 04:08 (two years ago)

uhhh sorry wrong thread

slai gorgeous-alexander (m bison), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 04:08 (two years ago)

Or so you thought

hrep (H.P), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 04:40 (two years ago)

uhhh the communists believe that too

― the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 bookmarkflaglink

Have communists done this?

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 07:34 (two years ago)

do you guys have these thoughts about other parts of wwii also? they killed more ppl bombing dresden and tokyo (in one night!) than hiroshima

― the late great, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 bookmarkflaglink

Yes. And Nagasaki too.

Not interested in this film at all but it was always going to get this 'debate' going. Of course it wasn't a good decision to drop the bomb. Oppenheimer should feel bad.

It's led to a world where Russia mutter about dropping nuclear bombs every few weeks. Liberal commentary throughout the Anglosphere are very blase about this stuff.

Zaporizhzhia could turn out to be a disaster.

All good to act about how 'complicated' all of this is.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 07:46 (two years ago)

When Stimson crosses Kyoto off the list and people in the cinema “laughed” at this moment. Maybe it was just the cinema crowd enjoying some gallows humour, but that was too much for me

this is just ignorance (and maybe bad filmmaking). stimson had lived in kyoto with his family and did not want to see it destroyed

He does say that in the film. And it seemed to me that it was being presented as the grimmest possible joke. OK, the people in our screening didn't laugh, but there certainly were "huh"s recognising the bleak humour of the light way he said it.

There are a few things that people have pointed out in this thread, like the above, and like "he didn't say the famous line when the test was complete, he said 'well, I guess that worked'," (and something else I can't remember at the moment) that are correct in the film. But that was one of the things I didn't like about it. I haven't read the book it's based on, but the film seemed to me like those incredibly faithful Harry Potter adaptations, that it had to cram in absolutely everything, sometimes in these fleeting scenes that are over before you've settled into them, introducing people you never see again. I would have liked them to pick a through line and stick to it.

trishyb, Tuesday, 25 July 2023 08:32 (two years ago)

I heard Kistiakowsky, the explosives expert was asking him pay up the bet they'd had straight after big boom test was successful. You'd sound like an absolute wanker coming out with famous quote to people who you work with, especially when some of them where equally responsible for weapon of mass death test actually being a success.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 08:48 (two years ago)

where

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 08:49 (two years ago)


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