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Movie Review: “Oppenheimer”

For a movie centered on the “father of the atomic bomb,” Oppenheimer depicts its most fateful sequence in understated fashion. The day that “Fat Man” actually goes off over Hiroshima, our haunted protagonist first learns of it from a staticky radio broadcast. There’s no courtesy call, no news footage, no social media feeds. Instead, J. Robert Oppenheimer sits nearly alone in the quiet recesses of the Los Alamos laboratory, a piece in a grand geopolitical drama that far exceeds him. Events are now out of control in a very frightening way: they have burst the boundaries of the lab once and for all, and nothing can be the same again.

Oppenheimer is director Christopher Nolan’s first film since 2020’s disastrous Tenet. And it may be his best—a sprawling, stark, eerie meditation on the tension between the cold purity of physics and the grubby realities of the human world, all seen through the eyes of a singularly troubled figure (Cillian Murphy). Like its central character, it is a profoundly ambiguous film that defies easy political or ideological characterization.

Like most recent Nolan films, Oppenheimer plays around with its cinematic timelines, cutting back and forth between scenes from Oppenheimer’s life and career, the postwar investigation into his security clearance prompted by Oppenheimer’s past Communist associations, and finally a Senate confirmation hearing for potential Commerce Secretary Lewis Strauss (a superb Robert Downey Jr.), who finds himself tainted by his own history with Oppenheimer. 

And there’s certainly a lot of ground to cover. We first glimpse a young Oppenheimer sparring with his tutors and bringing quantum theory from Europe to America, before it’s on to his troubled marriage to Kitty (an underused Emily Blunt), and his dalliances with Communist femme fatale Jean Tatlock (Florence Pugh). Eventually, of course, he’s called up by General Leslie Groves (Matt Damon) to head the enigmatic Manhattan Project and build an atomic weapon. All of this culminates in the legendary “Trinity” test in the New Mexico desert, the thunderous proof-of-concept for the bomb that changed the world.

But then, of course, bureaucracy intervenes, as Oppenheimer’s trustworthiness—with the Soviet Union ramping up its own atomic capabilities—comes into question. Were Manhattan Project security clearances handed out too cavalierly? Should Oppenheimer’s aversion to hydrogen bomb development be seen as sincere concern, or as disloyalty? In the era of the “Red Scare,” who can say?

That’s not to say, though, that Oppenheimer is a partisan hit piece (indeed, it probably skews conservative—“Communism” is a faceless and shadowy presence throughout, and it’s clearly Oppenheimer’s hamartia). Rather, the questions here are much bigger, cutting to the nature of scientific endeavor itself. 

As the film builds to its denouement, there’s a sense in which its text feels familiar enough. On the face of things, Oppenheimer mounts an extended plea for scientific independence over against political meddling. Keep the messy business of value judgments out of the lab, Oppenheimer and his colleagues protest over and over again to whomever will listen. Communists, capitalists, whomever—it’s all just noise. They want to be left alone to do their work, and maybe wrestle with the moral dimensions when they feel up to it.

But this is an old storytelling trope, and Nolan is savvier than that. The subtext of the film is that this quest for scientific neutrality is an utterly impossible fantasy. There is no lab work, especially not in wartime, that stands apart from fundamental value judgments. Oppenheimer’s choice to develop the bomb is simultaneously a choice to place it into the hands of American politicians. His choice to flirt with Communism is a choice to question whether America should be trusted with that kind of power. 

This is a truth that Nolan’s Oppenheimer can never quite bring himself to acknowledge outright. “Nobody knows what you believe,” a friend challenges Oppenheimer late in the game. “Do you?” And it’s a fair question. This Oppenheimer is a moral cipher, simultaneously brooding over the horrors of the atomic age while glorying in the thrill of his accomplishment. He can’t quite make up his mind—and Nolan declines to do so for his audience. The central question remains.

Like every Nolan film, this is a technical masterpiece featuring top-notch performances—especially, of course, Murphy’s spectral Oppenheimer—and pristine production design. And it’s all backed by a haunting score by Ludwig Göransson that (pleasingly) recalls Clint Mansell’s work on The Fountain. Happily, though, in this case it’s the characters and themes, more than just the craftsmanship, that lingers in the mind.

In the end, perhaps, the best reading of Nolan’s Oppenheimer is as a tragedy. That’s because, at bottom, it is more than just the story of one visionary man. It is the tragedy of the modern technological mind more broadly—the pursuit of physical mastery without correspondingly firm convictions.

That ambiguity may be profoundly human, of course. But as the stakes grow higher, it is an ambiguity the world can less and less afford.

 
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Posted by on August 4, 2023 in Historical

 

Movie Review: “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”

I’ll admit it: for the last several years, I deliberately ignored all news surrounding “Indiana Jones 5” because I didn’t want to believe it was actually happening. For all its faults, 2008’s Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull ended on a (mostly) perfect note: Indy and Marion reunited and married, with a son Indy never knew he had. A follow-up installment with an even older Indiana Jones seemed like a terrible idea. And then, of course, I couldn’t ignore it anymore: trailers started dropping in theaters and an official release date hit the calendar. Naturally, I couldn’t say no forever.

Color me pleasantly surprised. At bottom, Dial of Destiny is nowhere near the finest entry in this series. But it manages to be the finale I didn’t know I wanted.

We open with an extended fight sequence on a train set in 1944, featuring a digitally de-aged Harrison Ford trying to wrest the Holy Lance from Nazi hands. As it turns out, the train is carrying an even more valuable relic: the Antikythera Mechanism, part of a legendary time dial that can supposedly identify rifts in the time-space continuum. An ever-skeptical Indy secures the dial piece and stows it away.

Flash forward to a grumpy, seventy-something Indy living in Manhattan in 1969, as Apollo 11 astronauts first set foot on the Moon. Now estranged from Marion and in the midst of retiring from the classroom, he’s on the verge of turning into a dusty relic himself. But when his goddaughter Helena Shaw (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) turns up in search of the dial, Indy finds himself thrust back into action. And as usual, it’s a race against time: “ex”-Nazi scientist Jürgen Voller (Mads Mikkelsen) also wants the dial for his own nefarious purposes, and will kill to get it. Cue various vehicle chases, subterranean explorations, and supernatural shenanigans.

Taken purely as a summer blockbuster, Dial of Destiny has plenty of issues. Ford isn’t given enough to do, frequently making him feel like a tagalong in an adventure that’s supposed to be his. Waller-Bridge is a talented actress, but her character here is extraordinarily annoying—and much of her performance seems like a too-on-the-nose setup for a Disney+ spinoff series of her own. (Frankly, it seems like the studio wanted to do an Indy-Lara Croft crossover event but couldn’t get the rights.) And at two-and-a-half hours, this movie is way too long.

The action is iffy, too. This time around, Steven Spielberg isn’t behind the camera, and director James Mangold (responsible for, among other well-received films, the Old Man Wolverine adaptation Logan) has a noticeably different cinematic style. In particular, Mangold is fond of panoramic shots, which don’t serve his action scenes well: they lack the tightly cut, taut energy that characterizes the best Spielberg fights (just rewatch the truck chase from Raiders of the Lost Ark or the tank battle in Last Crusade).

Sometimes, though, Mangold’s distinctive approach is an asset—like LoganDial of Destiny is self-consciously an ending for the Indiana Jones character, and the emotional beats of the film have a gently elegiac tone that I’m not sure Spielberg would’ve pulled off.

I was a little ambivalent about the movie’s conclusion after leaving the theater, but the more I thought about it, the more I agree with Mangold’s storytelling instincts. Dial of Destiny’s central thematic hook is this: a hero whose life has been defined by his relationship to the past is forced into a climactic reckoning with it. And what Mangold rightly grasps is that this question has been looming over the entire Indiana Jones franchise, whether or not it’s been directly posed as such. “Riding off into the sunset” (Last Crusade) or “heading out for more adventures” (Kingdom of the Crystal Skull) just aren’t quite the right endings for this character. They can’t be, because they don’t actually conclude Indy’s arc in any meaningful way.

Trying to ignore this question is rather like wanting to go back to a version of James Bond “before” Casino Royale, before the question of Bond’s relationship to women and to authority was asked and answered meaningfully. The character would feel flat, unreflective, somehow less human. Likewise, Dial of Destiny asks its audience to undertake a deeper and more meaningful appraisal of the franchise as a whole—to see a consistent thematic through-line within the prior films, a through-line that properly has to reach an endpoint. That is exactly what the best sequels need to accomplish (and what so many fail disastrously at).

All of this culminates in one of the most strikingly life-affirming conclusions I could’ve imagined. Throughout the film, Indy finds himself brooding over why his life—lonely and aloof as it may be—is worth living, and in a culture increasingly willing to embrace “medical assistance in dying” (often given the ghoulish acronym MAiD), it feels remarkably countercultural for Dial of Destiny to so thoroughly reject that nihilism. The story of Indiana Jones now feels finished in a way it didn’t before, and this is a triumph all its own.

Dial of Destiny won’t be remembered as iconic (or, conversely, as chaotically out-there like Kingdom of the Crystal Skull). But if—like me—you grew up with Indy, then you owe it to yourself to see the adventure’s end. This coda is about as good as it could’ve hoped to be.

 
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Posted by on July 3, 2023 in Thrillers