With "Oppenheimer", Christopher Nolan presents a biopic that sets standards. This film vibrates for 181 minutes to show the multi-faceted figure of J. Robert Oppenheimer from several perspectives. Nolan jumps wildly back and forth in time, an impressive star ensemble fits into the aesthetic, which consists mainly of close-ups. Nolan focuses on two themes in particular:
1. what responsibility do scientists have?
2. what is the relationship of the state to its citizens - and vice versa?
The father of the atomic bomb appears in this film in all his turmoil, but is not a cinematic monument, a psychological drama, nor do we experience a celebration of the cult of genius; rather, this film throws us into the present again and again. At the same time, "Oppenheimer" is a highly intelligent reflection on the medium of film and the gaze of the camera.
Read more by Wolfgang M. Schmitt in the new Film Analysis!