Oppenheimer
An above-average, streaming-budget-looking courtroom drama that they tried to pass off as a cinematic event for the ages, and I’m just simply miffed that I actually paid IMAX prices to watch it.
★★★1/2
Mild Spoilers
Directed by Christopher Nolan
Written by Christopher Nolan, Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin
Oppenheimer is the biopic about J. Robert Oppenheimer, the “father of the atomic bomb”. He didn’t exactly invent the atom bomb, but he definitely spearheaded its development with a bunch of very smart scientists, and as a theoretical physicist, he was also no slouch himself. The efforts of Oppenheimer and his team ultimately let to the detonation of the only two atomic bombs in history on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, causing catastrophic military and civilian casualties in the name of saving more lives, events which have also changed the world forever.
Oppenheimer is an ok film, good even. Commendable performances, incredible cast (including Cillian Murphy, Robert Downey, Jr., Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Kenneth Branagh, Florence Pugh, and a lot of very familiar faces), and “arguably” an interesting story to tell – it is about the atomic bomb, for which the danger and implications of its mere existence still lingers in our consciousness today. Yet, why am I still feeling a little disappointed?
Firstly, the IMAX thing. In my opinion, there is nothing in the film that justified an IMAX presentation. Sure, the film looks prettier and all, but I refused to believe that you went in thinking only that, and not that you’re about to see the craziest, mind-blowingly accurate depiction of an atomic bomb explosion ever put on celluloid. I’m sorry to report that the “money” shot that everyone was waiting for was nothing more than a few seconds of a normal looking flaming mushroom shot against a completely black sky with no foreground or background elements used to emphasize its scale. It just… came and went.
Second: There are way too many characters, especially when they start throwing around multiple names in later scenes that I mixed up who they were really talking about. It’s made worse when some secondary characters were referred to by both their first and last names. The key characters were really Oppenheimer, Lewis Strauss (Downey, Jr.), General Groves (Damon) and Kitty Oppenheimer (Blunt). I get that Florence Pugh’s Jean Tatlock had some significance in Oppenheimer’s story, but I don’t know if it was really necessary to allocate so much screen time for this character other than to show off some superfluously sexy scenes that I felt was a bit derogatory and exploitative also, because Tatlock was after all a real person.
Fourth: I’ve not seen a single trailer and I still felt like the marketing was being a little misleading. This is not some taut and tense thriller of any sort, but really a courtroom drama I kid you not. Downey, Jr.’s Strauss is the only straight up antagonist in the film, heading a campaign to discredit Oppenheimer with a vendetta.
Third: See what I did there? I put the fourth point first before the third… just because, and this movie is like that, but worse. The film jumps across at least three or four time periods for no discernible reason. I think even they started to realize it was too confusing and employed black and white shots to differentiate between the time periods. Even that didn’t help, because normally a black-and-white scene would denote an earlier time period, but they used it for a period ahead of the main timeline, which later also reverted to colour without giving any cue. Or was that just Strauss’ scenes? I don’t know, I’m confused!
Last (or is it First?): Imagine Michael Bay or Tony Scott directing courtroom scenes, or even the dramatic ones – that’s what Nolan did with some of the talky bits. Hard cuts to close-ups and loud sound cues and bombastic music ad nauseam to emphasize the AGONY Oppenheimer is FEELING about the ACCUSATIONS and INSINUATIONS being thrown at him, because ARE YOU FEELING LOUDLY THE IMPORTANCE OF IT NOW? I found this a little odd coming from a confident and assured filmmaker like Nolan, who was never shy about letting his dialogues just play out as they were.
Maybe I’m just nitpicking too much. Maybe upon second viewing it will finally reveal itself as the masterpiece that it truly is. Or maybe it’s just an above-average, streaming-budget-looking courtroom drama that they tried to pass off as a cinematic event for the ages, and I’m just simply miffed that I actually paid IMAX prices to watch it.