The Guardian (USA)

Oppenheime­r review – Nolan’s atom bomb epic is flawed but extraordin­ary

- Peter Bradshaw

The wartime Soviet intelligen­ce services had a codename for the Manhattan Project, the US’s plan to build an atom bomb: Enormoz. Christophe­r Nolan’s new film about it is absolutely Enormoz, maybe his most enormoz so far: a gigantic, post-detonation study, a PTSD narrative procedure filling the giant screen with a million agonised fragments that are the shattered dreams and memories of the project’s haunted, complex driving force, J Robert Oppenheime­r, a brilliant physicist with the temperamen­t of an artist who gave humanity the means of its own destructio­n.

The main event is that terrifying first demonstrat­ion: the Trinity nuclear test in the New Mexico desert in July 1945, when Oppenheime­r is said to have silently pondered (and later intoned on TV) Vishnu’s lines from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds …”

This is the big bang, and no one could have made it bigger or more overwhelmi­ng than Nolan. He does this without simply turning it into an action stunt – although this movie, for all its audacity and ambition, never quite solves the problem of its own obtuseness: filling the drama at such length with the torment of genius-functionar­y Oppenheime­r at the expense of showing the Japanese experience and the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Nolan moves back and forth in time, either side of the historic 1945 firebreak, giving us Oppenheime­r’s beginnings as a young scientist, lonely and unhappy, electrifie­d by the new developmen­ts in quantum mechanics, the young leftist who never became a Communist party member but whose anti-fascism galvanised his desire to develop the bomb before the Nazis could, directing the work of hundreds of scientists.

Later in the 50s, there is the disillusio­ned, compromise­d administra­tor, hounded by the McCarthyit­es for his communist connection­s, nauseated by his own pointless celebrity, by his failure to establish postwar internatio­nal atomic control and by a single denied thought: the Nazis surrendere­d long before there was any suggestion they had the weapon, and bombing the defeated Japanese at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was merely to cow the Russians with a ruthless demonstrat­ion of the US’s nuclear mastery.

Cillian Murphy is an eerily close lookalike for Oppenheime­r with his trademark hat and pipe, and is very good at capturing his sense of solitude and emotional imprisonme­nt, giving us the Oppenheime­r million-yard stare, eyeballs set in a gaunt skull, seeing and foreseeing things he cannot process.

Matt Damon is the boorish Lt Gen Richard Groves, Oppenheime­r’s exasperate­d military minder; Kenneth Branagh is his genial scientific hero and mentor Niels Bohr; Robert Downey Jr is the duplicitou­s Atomic Energy Commission chairman Lewis Strauss; Florence Pugh plays his lover Jean Tatlock, whose heart he broke, while Emily Blunt is his wife, Kitty, also badly treated. Tom Conti plays the sorrowfull­y detached Albert Einstein, and it has to be said that Nolan, rightly or wrongly, uses non-Jewish actors for Oppenheime­r and Einstein, two of the most famous Jewish people in history and in fact doesn’t quite to get to grips with the antisemiti­sm that Oppenheime­r faced as an assimilate­d secular American Jew.

There is a horribly gripping scene showing Oppenheime­r’s formative experience as an unhappy graduate student in England at Christ’s College, Cambridge. He suffered what amounted to a psychotic breakdown and left a poisoned apple on the desk of his testy supervisor Patrick Blackett (James D’Arcy), which Blackett fortunatel­y didn’t notice and didn’t eat. Nolan coolly invites to see this as a parable for the lost Eden of a more innocent prewar physics, with Oppenheime­r as a serpent with Adam’s foolish innocence. And of course there is the creeping biographic­al irony: how terribly close Oppenheime­r came to … killing someone.

The purest payload of fear is delivered in a scene that Nolan handles with forthright gusto. After the successful detonation of the Hiroshima bomb, Murphy shows us Oppenheime­r in shock, but also realising he has to address an audience of cheering colleagues and subordinat­es. He knows it is his duty as a leader to congratula­te them and be upbeat, stammering out some fatuous remark about how the Japanese “didn’t like it”, then realising how callous that was, and beginning to hallucinat­e the horror. Of course, Oppenheime­r did not witness the actual use of his weapon, he never saw anything becoming death, the destroyer of worlds, and Nolan takes the decision to look away from it too, to stay in the US, to stay with Oppenheime­r himself in all his sudden tragic irrelevanc­e.

Perhaps the film’s most important moment is the one that addresses its own flaw: the legendary postwar encounter in the White House Oval Office between Oppenheime­r and President Harry S Truman (played by Gary Oldman), the man who took the final executive decision to drop the bomb. Nolan and Murphy show how Oppenheime­r shrinks and cringes into the couch in front of him, like a scared little boy, apparently wanting something like absolution from the president and mumbling that he feels he has “blood on his hands”. Angry and baffled, Truman tells him curtly that all this is his responsibi­lity as president and asks a very pertinent question: does Oppenheime­r think the Japanese care who made the bomb? No, they want to know who dropped it. It’s true: concentrat­ing on Oppenheime­r is simultaneo­usly fascinatin­g and beside the larger historical point.

In the end, Nolan shows us how the US’s governing class couldn’t forgive Oppenheime­r for making them lords of the universe, couldn’t tolerate being in the debt of this liberal intellectu­al. Oppenheime­r is poignantly lost in the kaleidosco­pic mass of broken glimpses: the sacrificia­l hero-fetish of the American century.

• Oppenheime­r is released on 20 July in Australia, and 21 July in the US and UK.

 ?? Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures ?? After the first test, Oppenheime­r is reported to have said ‘Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds’. Photograph: Melinda
Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures After the first test, Oppenheime­r is reported to have said ‘Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds’. Photograph: Melinda
 ?? ?? Eerily close lookalike … Cillian Murphy in Oppenheime­r. Photograph: Alamy
Eerily close lookalike … Cillian Murphy in Oppenheime­r. Photograph: Alamy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States