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‘Oppenheime­r’ fans rediscover­ing a 40-year-old documentar­y

- MARC TRACY

One morning in the 1950s, Jon H. Else’s father pointed toward Nevada from their home in Sacramento. “There was this orange glow that suddenly rose up in the sky, and then shrank back down,” Else recalled. It was, hundreds of miles away, an atomic weapon test: a symbol of the world that was created when a team of Americans led by the physicist J. Robert Oppenheime­r exploded the first nuclear bomb a decade earlier on July 16, 1945.

Growing up in the nuclear age left an impression on Else, now 78.

He was later a series producer of the award-winning “Eyes on the Prize,” a program on the civil rights movement, and directed documentar­ies about the Great Depression and Wagner’s “Ring” cycle. But before all that, in 1981, he made a documentar­y about Oppenheime­r, the scientist whose bony visage graced the covers of mid-century magazines, and the bomb. It was called “The Day After Trinity,” a reference to that inaugural detonation.

Decades later, viewers are flocking to Else’s film, a nominee for the Academy Award for best documentar­y feature, as a companion to Christophe­r Nolan’s biopic “Oppenheime­r,” which grossed more than $100 million domestical­ly in its opening week this month.

After the Criterion Channel made “The Day After Trinity” available without a subscripti­on until August, it shot to the top of the streaming service’s most-watched films this month, alongside movies directed by Martin Scorsese, Paul Verhoeven, Michael Mann and other typically Letterboxd­core filmmakers.

“We have seen a huge increase in views,”

Criterion said, “and we’re very happy with the success of the strategy as a way to make sure this film found its rightful place in the conversati­on around ‘Oppenheime­r.’”

Else, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, praised Nolan’s film, which he saw last weekend in San Francisco. (A spokeswoma­n for Nolan said he was not available to comment.) “These stories have to be retold every generation,” Else said, “and they have to be told by new storytelle­rs.”

Nolan’s three-hour opus, a Universal release shot on IMAX film with a lavish cast of brand-name Hollywood actors, shares much with “The Day After Trinity,” an 88-minute documentar­y financed by the public television station in San Jose, Calif., and various grants.

The Oppenheime­r of “Oppenheime­r” (based on Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin’s Pulitzer Prize-winning biography “American Prometheus”), and the Oppenheime­r of “The Day After Trinity” are the same brilliant, sensitive, haunted soul. “This man who was apparently a completely nonviolent fellow was the architect of the most savage weapon in history,” Else said.

The movies feature some of the same characters from the life of Oppenheime­r, who died in 1967, including his brother, Frank (played in “Oppenheime­r” by Dylan Arnold), his friend Haakon Chevalier (Jefferson Hall) and the physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi (David Krumholtz). Both films build to Trinity and then document the conflict between some of its inventors’ hope that the bomb would never be used in war and its deployment in Japan, the invention of the more devastatin­g hydrogen bomb and the nuclear arms race of the Cold War.

Tracy is a culture reporter with NYT©2023

The New York Times

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