The Denver Post

“Barbenheim­er” isn’t a contest; but, which film would win?

- By Kyle Buchanan

The simultaneo­us release of “Barbie” and “Oppenheime­r” captured the pop- cultural imaginatio­n because before we had seen either film, it was hard to imagine two features that occupied such distinctly different lanes. But now that audiences have sampled Greta Gerwig’s colorful Mattel comedy and Christophe­r Nolan’s weighty drama about J. Robert Oppenheime­r, the so- called father of the atomic bomb, it’s become clear that for all their tonal difference­s, each film is a one- of-a-kind auteurist blockbuste­r pondering some pretty meaty existentia­l questions.

All this is a heady way of saying: Let’s pit ‘em against each other!

Who would win if there were an actual battle of Barbenheim­er? To arrive at an answer, I’ve put each film through its paces in several categories, with tests devised to measure them that are every bit as scientific­ally rigorous as the experiment­s conducted during Oppenheime­r’s Manhattan Project. (Note: This claim has not been factchecke­d.)

Culpabilit­y of protagonis­t

Do Oppenheime­r and Barbie both have blood on their hands? After racing to create an atomic bomb that will end World War II, Oppenheime­r (Cillian Murphy) spends the final hour of his movie haunted by visions of the dead and wondering whether he has unleashed a nuclear arms race that will imperil the future of humanity. Barbie ( Margot Robbie) is also forced to face her own complicate­d legacy: Upon entering the real world, where she expects to be greeted as a benevolent superstar, she is instead dressed down by teenage girls who deride her as a fascist has-been whose unrealisti­c beauty standards have harmed generation­s of women. At least Barbie can assuage her guilty conscience with a journey of self- discovery and you-gogirl support from America Ferrera; Oppenheime­r has to endure a humiliatin­g government hearing and a series of withering looks from Emily Blunt. Then again, it’s a level of flagellati­on he feels he deserves, which packs even more of a punch. Advantage: “Oppenheime­r”

Depiction of governance

Men rule the world in “Oppenheime­r,” and their government is filled with vipers: After the war ends, battles are waged on the home front as ambitious apparatchi­ks scheme to discredit their rivals and formerly jovial colleagues are moved to stab one another in the back. The femaleled government in “Barbie” rules over a comparativ­e utopia that subs slumber parties for strife and posits that a dangerous coup perpetrate­d by angry, addled men can be undone simply by tricking them into a musical number. Who wouldn’t rather live in that world? Advantage: “Barbie”

Depth of ensemble

The seeds of Barbenheim­er were sown early in production as both films raced to cast half of Hollywood in their ever-swelling ensembles, and each cast came with some notable similariti­es. Leads Murphy and Robbie have both played Batman villains. (He was Scarecrow in Nolan’s Bat-features, while she was Harley Quinn for DC.) Each film features a hot young auteur in the cast — the “Uncut Gems” co-director Benny Safdie pops up throughout “Oppenheime­r,” while “Barbie” has a cameo from the writer- director of “Promising Young Woman,” Emerald Fennell — as well as a next-generation Marvel star (Florence Pugh in “Oppenheime­r,” Simu Liu in “Barbie”). “Oppenheime­r” flexes a bit harder by filling even its smallest roles with Oscar winners like Rami Malek, Kenneth Branagh and Casey Affleck, but “Barbie” had the good sense to wonder what Rhea Perlman has been up to lately, which ought to count for nearly as much. Ultimately, this category is just too close to call. Tie

Fashion

Barbie is a famous clotheshor­se, and Gerwig’s movie more than delivers on the fashion front: Whether Robbie’s doll is wearing gingham dresses or disco jumpsuits, she takes costumes that could read as cosplay and makes them chic. You might not expect the same attention to sartorial detail from “Oppenheime­r,” but 12 films into his career, one of Nolan’s cinematic trademarks has become impeccable suiting: After Oppenheime­r is advised by a colleague to level up his look, we watch him don a hat and select a pipe in a sequence that Nolan shoots as portentous­ly as Batman putting on body armor. Still, even though Murphy is striking in period garments, there can be only one victor in this category. We have no doubt that Barbie would look fashionabl­e even in Oppenheime­r’s tailored menswear, but could the theoretica­l physicist pull off her rollerblad­ing look in eye-searing fluorescen­ts? Advantage: “Barbie”

Catchphras­es

Oppenheime­r said that after the explosive test of the atomic bomb, a quote from Hindu scripture came to mind: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” In Nolan’s film, we hear those words said by Oppenheime­r, but the first time he speaks them is in an unusual sex scene with his recurring flame, Jean Tatlock ( Pugh), in which she pauses coitus to fetch a copy of the Bhagavad Gita, then asks Oppenheime­r to translate the famous quote from Sanskrit, sans clothes. ( Kinky, yes, but Tatlock clearly knows that the way to this man’s heart is to first admire his bookshelf.) “Barbie” has its fair share of quotable lines — two Ken catchphras­es, “I’m just Ken” and “I am Kenough,” have already set social media ablaze — but were any of them translated from the original Mattel? Advantage: “Oppenheime­r”

Sound design

In recent films, Nolan has employed a “wall of sound” approach that hits its apex in “Oppenheime­r”: Every single minute is soundtrack­ed by Ludwig Goransson’s propulsive score, while set pieces like the Trinity test and Oppenheime­r’s foot- stomping gymnasium rally employ so much thunderous bass that they threaten to shake the entire multiplex. Though the film is a threehour drama about men in lecture halls, classes and courtrooms, its soundscape blares with the blockbuste­r momentum of an action film, and for all its sonic sophistica­tion, “Oppenheime­r” is surely the frontrunne­r for this year’s bestsound Oscar. Still, “Barbie” has a Dua Lipa song. Advantage: “Barbie”

Box office

The rising tide of Barbenheim­er has lifted both films to smash-hit status. “Barbie” scored the biggest opening weekend of the year with $162 million, barely faltered in its second week, and is now on track to pass more than $1 billion worldwide and potentiall­y dethrone “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” as the year’s top grosser. And though other prestige dramas have struggled to connect at the box office since the pandemic, “Oppenheime­r” has been thriving: Its $82 million opening weekend far surpassed any of Nolan’s non- superhero features, and the film’s final worldwide total could top $800 million, a stunning finish for a super-long biopic. Though “Barbie” is the clear winner here, this is a race with no loser. Advantage: “Barbie”

Final result

Think pink! In the battle of Barbenheim­er, Gerwig’s comedy ekes out a victory over “Oppenheime­r,” proving that some fights can be finished with no nuclear escalation whatsoever. (But how would Gerwig’s “Little Women” fare against Nolan’s previous film, “Tenet”? Watch this space: If the strikes continue, I may have to write that.)

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO — AP ?? The marquee for the Los Feliz Theatre features the films “Oppenheime­r” and “Barbie,” on July 28, in Los Angeles.
CHRIS PIZZELLO — AP The marquee for the Los Feliz Theatre features the films “Oppenheime­r” and “Barbie,” on July 28, in Los Angeles.

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