Oppenheimer

It’s too early to pencil in Oscar winners’ names but it’s easy to imagine Oppenheimer pulling down a few next March. Starting with Christopher Nolan who wrote and directed this epic film. Is it his best film to date? Maybe. Among his top three, for sure.

Two weird trends this summer: baseball games have gotten shorter and movies have gotten longer. Oppenheimer is a three hour movie but screenwriter Nolan delivers huge amounts of narrative in those 180 minutes. And director Nolan maintains a fierce pace with multiple time jumps to tell that story. A clever device he employs is purposeful shifts between color and black-and-white sequences.

What about Cillian Murphy as Robert Oppenheimer? He’s been great in smaller movie roles and in the TV series Peaky Blinders. Although Murphy’s is not a household name, Nolan made a wise choice in giving Murphy the mantle of carrying this film. Not unlike the way the U.S. Army’s Leslie Groves (Matt Damon) chooses Oppenheimer to run the Manhattan Project despite the physicist’s baggage. 

Part of that baggage is his alcoholic wife Kitty (Emily Blunt) who is a Communist. As is Robert’s brother Frank (Dylan Arnold). A needy lover, Jean Tatlock (Florence Pugh), also has red connections. Is Oppenheimer himself a Communist sympathizer? He contributed to revolutionaries in Spain. He tried to organize a faculty union at Cal. But his work as a physicist makes him the right man to head the development of the atomic bomb at Los Alamos.

The role of Lewis Strauss includes some of the best Oscar-bait dialogue since Jack Nicholson took the trophy with his “you can’t handle the truth” speech in A Few Good Men (which took Best Picture in 1992.) Robert Downey Jr. is up to the task of portraying a complex individual who is less well-known than the film’s title character. 

Much of Strauss’s screen time revolves around hearings for his nomination to be U.S. Commerce Secretary during Ike’s second term. He also recruited Oppenheimer at Princeton and later was head of the Atomic Energy Commission. 

Jason Clarke as AEC attorney Roger Robb has another role that  allows for some scenery chewing. His confrontations with Oppenheimer and others during an inquiry into Oppenheimer’s fitness for continued security clearance are forceful and direct.

Among the films large cast, players include Kenneth Branagh, Alden Ehrenreich, James D’Arcy, Matthew Modine, Josh Hartnett, Casey Affleck, Dean DeHaan and Rami Malek. Tom Conti appears as Albert Einstein and Gary Oldman portrays Harry Truman.

Sound plays a major role in Oppenheimer. The dynamic range between ear-splitting loudness and calming silence is finessed beautifully by Nolan and the film’s sound crew. Expect a few awards nods to the craftspersons who make the movie sound good. Ludwig Goransson’s music provides momentum and adds to the intensity of numerous scenes. 

Because of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and saber rattling by both the U.S. and Russia, Oppenheimer is not just entertainment but also a timely movie. Although the film is a dramatization of real events, there’s a foundation of truth here that provides useful information for all Americans, especially younger citizens. 

Twenty-first century perspectives have revised our views of much of our nation’s history including our participation in wars. The paradox of the atom bomb’s being a good thing (ending hostilities with Japan) and a horrible thing (killing thousands of civilians) is one that has been and will be constantly examined. Oppenheimer is now part of that discussion. 

The movie is likely to make Cillian Murphy a genuine star for his strong performance. If you’re going to be onscreen for that much of a movie, you’d better be good. He is. Will he receive awards consideration? Bet on it.

Oppenheimer will bring fresh individual accolades to Nolan and Downey, among others. And the film itself is a likely Best Picture nominee. It is, as they say, a MAJOR motion picture!

Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One

Quality versus quantity. It’s a choice made in many aspects of life. Including action movies. 

For Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One, the choice was quality. The action scenes are thrilling, outrageous and huge fun to watch. But the sitting around talking scenes… eh, not so much fun.

Toby Keith had a hit song called A Little Less Talk And A Lot More Action. I thought of that 30-years-ago country hit as I exited the MI:DR screening. Quantity.

But make no mistake, this new film IS a “must-see.” In the theater. As with many action films of late, it’s sometimes hard to tell what’s real and what’s special effects. However, because the action scenes in MI:DR are so well done, it doesn’t matter. Quality.

MI:DR is a “must-see” because its star is Tom Cruise who “saved Hollywood” last year with Top Gun: Maverick. Tom no longer has that youthful look but when he’s onscreen there’s an electricity and a sparkle that make whatever his eventual payday turns out to be… not enough. 

This time the impossible mission for Ethan Hunt (Cruise) is to track down a key that can provide great power to whoever possesses it. That’s right, a key. Well, it’s a special key made of two pieces that fit together. It provides control of the Entity, a software program that has the potential to mess stuff up really bad. 

To secure the key, Hunt and those who also want it conduct a long running chase from Abu Dhabi to Rome to Venice to the Austrian Alps. Among those involved in the pursuit of the prize are some bad guys and girls and some good guys and girls and some whose allegiance is initially uncertain. Running along with Hunt are his support team played by Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg. 

The film’s money shot is the train business that has been featured in trailers and ads and is seriously mind-blowing. But the chase sequence on the streets of Rome is also a highlight. It features a Fiat being driven down the city’s famous Spanish Steps. 

The cast includes players who can handle physical requirements as well as delivering convincing reads of their scripted lines. Special attention goes to Hayley Atwell as Grace, her highest profile role to date. This movie will bring her to the forefront of movie stardom. 

Rebecca Ferguson, Vanessa Kirby, Pom Klementieff, Esai Morales, Shea Whigham and Henry Czerny also play major roles. Strong cast!

Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One is directed by Christopher McQuarrie who also co-wrote it with Erik Jendresen. Rated PG-13. Run time is 2:43.

And, looking ahead… Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part Two is set to hit theaters on June 28, 2024.