Oppenheimer (2023)

oppenheimer movie posterBarbieheimer, the crafty, endearing portmanteau of Barbie and Oppenheimer, the two biggest blockbusters of the summer, became mainstream weeks months before the dual-day release of each movie. Moviegoers flocked to the theaters in greater fashion than even 2022’s Top Gun: Maverick. This ultra-successful and undeniably popular film has become universally accepted as bringing people back to theaters following the COVID-19 pandemic. Some would say that it saved movie theaters entirely. As someone who sees two, three, or sometimes even more movies in the theater in any given month, and often being one of a small handful of patrons, I am in that camp.

Top Gun: Maverick grossed $127 million in its opening weekend, a fantastic number. Barbie ($162 million) and Oppenheimer ($83 million). With each filming budgeting around $100 million, each movie is a smashing success and, as it looks now, benefited from a same-day release. The number of people who saw the films on the same day or consecutive days was even more impressive.

Barbie earned the 19th-highest opening weekend gross of all time, while Oppenheimer earned the 111th-highest. These are incredible feats, considering that neither is a superhero or animated film, and is doing so in a day and age where moviegoers have, more often than ever, sacrificed going to the theater because of the cost of doing so and the home theater experience being an equal, or often better, alternative.

Critically, each movie is a massive hit, with Oppenheimer (94% critics, 92% audience) fairing slightly better than Barbie (89% critics, 86% audience). In perhaps the most unpopular movie opinion of the summer of 2023, I am confident that each film is overrated. I’d go so far as to say that neither movie is even particularly good. As I wrote in my review of Barbie, I felt frustrated with the style of the film. I understand what it was trying to say, though it wasn’t nearly as revolutionary in 2023 as it might have been in 2013. Its purposeful obscurity in its promotion left people wondering if it was a film made more for adults or kids who enjoy the doll and want to learn the magic behind Barbieland. This, undoubtedly, resulted in confusion for some and irritation for others. It was irritating for me, as by the third act, I couldn’t wait for the film to end.

With Oppenheimer, it was more boredom than anything else. Though it was three hours, it didn’t necessarily drag or even feel that long. Instead, it was much more dialogue-driven than I expected from a Nolan movie. If you didn’t like Dunkirk (I did enjoy that film), it might be even more challenging to enjoy OppenheimerBarbie (Margot Robbie) and Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) each had fantastic acting performances from their lead actors, as well as solid performances (Oppenheimer with Robert Downey, Jr., Barbie with Ryan Gosling) for the two main supporting actors. Each film was directed by a Hollywood heavyweight (Greta Gerwig, Christopher Nolan). Sadly, most of the positive similarities between the two films end there.

oppenheimer movie still 1

Nolan (InterstellarInception) might be the most admired and sought-after director. Oppenheimer marks his twelfth feature-length film. All have earned a Rotten Tomatoes audience score of 75% or higher, and all but one (Tenet, 69%) the same with critics. I’ve seen all of his films (except for Tenet), and I’ve appreciated and enjoyed all eleven. I admired Oppenheimer to an extent, but I did not enjoy it. It was long, tedious, and more meddlesome than thought-proving, educational, and entertaining. Of Nolan’s 12 credits, only Dunkirk is based on a real-life event. Appreciated for its mastery of editing, sound mixing, and production design, Dunkirk’s biggest flaw was its story. Oppenheimer told an important story that most likely only knew parts and pieces. However, its story could have been more entertaining. Nolan’s films (The Dark Knight Rises, Inception, Interstellar, The Prestige, and more) are known for keeping audiences glued to the edges of their seats with their pulsating action sequences or can’t-turn-away suspense. Oppenheimer didn’t have either of these characteristics.

Murphy (28 Days Later, Red Eye) stars as J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb who led the United States’ development of the first nuclear weapons during World II. We stay with our lead character throughout the 180-minute film, through back-and-forth narrations and points of view in his life. While the dropping of the two atomic bombs occurred in 1944, the film opens in 1954 at the start of a security hearing as Admiral Lewis Strauss (a vindictively captivating Robert Downey Jr. – Ironman 3The Judge) is working to get his security clearance revoked, believing he has ties to communism, and is a threat to American security. We flashback to 1947 when Strauss first met Oppenheimer, appointing him Director of the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton. There is one scene in particular that we see from Strauss’s perspective as he walks toward Oppenheimer and Albert Einstein. We don’t know what the two men say to each other, but the look on Einstein’s face as he passes Strauss informs us that they weren’t discussing the weather.

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Nolan transitions us throughout the movie between the 1954 Congressional hearing and other points of Oppenheimer’s life, including his time as a physics major at Cambridge University, his Ph.D. studies at the University of Gottingen, and his teaching at the University of California Berkeley, the pursuit of his future wife, Kitty Puening (Emily Blunt – A Quiet Place Part IISicario), a member of the Communist Party, and his selection by General Leslie Groves (Matt Damon – The MartianElysium) to be the director of the Manhattan Project, its goal to create and deploy the world’s first atomic bomb.

The highlight of the film is Murphy’s performance. He’s a lock to earn a Best Actor Academy Award nomination and is the current frontrunner to win. He engulfs himself in the role, bringing credibility to Oppenheimer while exposing his vulnerability, remorse, and inability to stand up for himself, even when he is unfairly attacked, and part of a mudslinging campaign intended to destroy his credibility. Murphy helped lift the performances of the incredible ensemble, including Oppenheimer’s mistress, Janet (Florence Pugh – Midsommar, Don’t Worry Darling).

As a history lesson, Oppenheimer tells an important story. It is finely directed, and while it doesn’t drag, it is long. It feels too detailed, at times, for a three-hour movie. It might have worked better as a mini-series, though it likely would not have had the budget, Nolan, or the Hollywood A-listers attached to it. Some have said Oppenheimer is Nolan’s best film and the one with its finest direction. Not only does this not feel like a Nolan film, but with the same cast and script, it could have been as well (the human element is not better) in the hands of another director. The human part is often the one criticism he receives in most of his films. We don’t feel the emotion as it relates to the characters. It’s an assessment I agree with and is fully displayed in his latest effort.

Plot 8/10
Character Development 7/10
Character Chemistry 7/10
Acting 10/10
Screenplay 7/10
Directing 9/10
Cinematography 9/10
Sound 8/10 (Every other Nolan-directed film I’ve seen is a 10/10 in sound)
Hook and Reel 6/10 (no real catch…hardly any reel…this was a three-hour history lesson)
Universal Relevance 8.5/10 (often felt bloated)
79.5%

C

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