The Best Picture favourite going into awards season is none other than Chrostopher Nolan’s nuclear epic, Oppenheimer. Spanning the life and career of Robert J. Oppenheimer, the “Father of the Atomic Bomb”. Starring Cillian Murphy in the titular role, Oppenheimer is a three-hour insight into the work and personal life of one of the most controversial figures in modern history.
Written and directed by Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer is based on the biography, American Prometheus by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin. Nolan’s unique perspective stemmed from the writing process as the entire screenplay is written from the first-person. This exacerbates the fact that Oppenheimer provides a limited view as the titular character is in almost every scene. The film flits between key points in Oppenheimer’s life spanning his beginnings as a budding physicist to the aftermath of the nuclear bombings on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nolan’s direction feels controlled and focused, his passion for the project coming through in every frame.
As the titular character, it can be argued that Oppenheimer lives or dies from the Cillian Murphy performance. Murphy can always be trusted to bring a nuanced performance. His turn as Oppenheimer is so intimate and yet always holding the audience at a distance. Seeing his internal conflict between the scientific achievements and the ethics rise to the surface in the final act is gripping. The scene in which Hiroshima has been been bombed and Oppenheimer begins to envision corpses on the follow among the ruptuous applause from his colleagues is one of the best scenes in any Nolan film.
Providing a standout performance in support is Robert Downey Jr. Having dominated cinema screens for the past decade as Iron Man in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Oppenheimer may be the first project a lot of people have seen Downey Jr outside of the franchise. The performances couldn’t be more different and sees Downey Jr return to form. Playing the antagonistic Rear Admiral Lewis Strauss who is hellbent on taking Oppenheimer down, he commands every scene he is in. His scenes with Murphy are among the best in the film and it’s up there with his other phenomenal turns in films such as Chaplin and Tropic Thunder.

There are a plethora of supporting turns in the film that are impressive. Another that is garnering a lot of attention is Emily Blunt as Katherine “Kitty” Oppenheimer. One consistent critique of Nolan’s previous films are the lack of female characters. When there are female characters, they tend to be underwritten. Kitty is probably the most in-depth female character that Nolan had included in his filmography. Blunt’s performance is subtle and brilliant, especially towards the end when her anger at the government is evident following their dismissal of her husband.
The score by Ludwig Gorrenson captures in the inevitability of the bomb. Filled with dramatic crescendo and loud bombastic sounds, Gorrenson’s music becomes a dominant force during the film’s climactic scenes. The opening track “Fission” really highlights the anticipation and inevitable change in history. Gorrenson isn’t afraid to change the tone and pacing of tracks to emphasise the unpredictability and shift in dynamics and events.
The cinematography by Hoyte van Hoytema is stunning. The standout scene in the film is when the Trinity Test is carried out and this is thanks to van Hoytema’s incredible work. The focus on Oppenheimer as he waits for the results swiftly followed by blinding light marks a visual change in the film. The scenery in Oppenheimer consists largely of open spaces but there is such a pinpointed focus on the characters that it really closes the environment in towards Murphy and his performance.
Overall, Oppenheimer does have a runtime that could have been edited down ever so slightly, especially in the first act. However, it is also one of Nolan’s best films as director. His passion and knowledge on its subject piercing through every frame from beginning to end. It is a film filled to the brim with details and nuanced performances that makes it easy to see why it is garnering so much critical and commercial praise.
What did you think of Oppenheimer? Let me know in the comments below!
