*OPPENHEIMER* is the MOVIE of the YEAR!! | Movie Reaction

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  • Опубліковано 16 лис 2023
  • #oppenheimer #reaction
    Oppenheimer was one of the most EXPLOSIVE movies of the year. Let's see if it lives up to those expectations of a Nolan epic
    See Videos EARLY over on Patreon!
    / jasonjeffory
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    *Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 113

  • @nicolaslabra2225
    @nicolaslabra2225 6 місяців тому +58

    i think the "i believe we did" reffers to how they feared a physical chain reaction, but they missed the political chain reaction that the atomic bomb would create.

    • @KingGhidorah777
      @KingGhidorah777 6 місяців тому +27

      the "I believe we did" means that the chain reaction was the fact the weapon now exists, and its only a matter of time until the world destroys itself with it

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 4 місяці тому

      @@KingGhidorah777 And the water ripples signify both the physical (literal atomic blast radii everywhere) and political after-effects.

    • @865style
      @865style 3 місяці тому

      He was talking about other countries following him/ us and it leading to a chain reaction that would have other countries building bombs that could end the world.

  • @jennarollan211
    @jennarollan211 6 місяців тому +24

    There was a rumor that the military killed Tatlock so the shot with the hand was a reference to that. It was fishy that her suicide note wasn't signed.

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 6 місяців тому +27

    For the Black and white sections of the movie to be shot in the same quality as the rest of the film, Kodak produced a limited supply of their double-X black and white film stock in 70mm. This film stock was chosen specifically for its heritage - it was originally sold to photographers as Super-XX during World War II and was very popular with photojournalists of the era.
    The Trinity detonation scene uses a combination of practical effects and digital compositing. Multiple explosions were performed practically, with a hybrid of gasoline, propane, aluminum, and magnesium substances involving big miniatures. These were filmed at high speeds from multiple angles, and then layered using digital effects to create the iconic "mushroom cloud".
    Albert Einstein is shown walking in the woods with Kurt Gödel. The two of them did take long walks together, as friends at the Institute for Advanced Studies.
    The Trinity test scene references Richard Feynman's story from the chapter "Los Alamos from Below". Just before the test, Feynman doesn't put sunblock on his face but gets inside a car, saying that the glass will block the ultraviolet rays.
    When asked what he wants to name the bomb at Los Alamos, Oppenheimer mutters "Batter my heart, three-personed God" before saying "Trinity." This is from the first line of John Donne's Holy Sonnet 14, which refers to the holy trinity.
    Surpassed Saving Private Ryan (1998) as the highest-grossing World War II film domestically, and surpassed Christopher Nolan's own Dunkirk (2017) as the highest-grossing World War II film worldwide.
    The real Robert Oppenheimer stood 5'11 and weighed only an average of 128 pounds. Under the pressure of the Manhattan Project, his weight had dropped to 115 pounds.
    This is Josh Hartnett's first WWII movie since Pearl Harbor (2001), which co-starred Ben Affleck, Casey Affleck's older brother and Matt Damon's childhood friend.

  • @a-54hrithickbarani89
    @a-54hrithickbarani89 6 місяців тому +23

    First movie reaction to Oppenheimer on UA-cam!

    • @JackieG717
      @JackieG717 6 місяців тому +3

      Been a few others months ago

    • @JakeMasterss
      @JakeMasterss 6 місяців тому +5

      @@JackieG717those are trailers ahaha

    • @aniqalam8231
      @aniqalam8231 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@@JakeMasterss no there are few movie reaction posted few months ago but they watch the movie in cam print so it's not gonna be fun

    • @JackieG717
      @JackieG717 6 місяців тому +1

      @@JakeMasterss you need to look a little harder

    • @JakeMasterss
      @JakeMasterss 6 місяців тому

      @@JackieG717 link em then

  • @jennifergrove2368
    @jennifergrove2368 6 місяців тому +16

    I saw this in the IMAX and waited for Barbie to come out on dvd and I'm so glad I did because damn...this was amazing to see on the silver screen visually.

  • @Dhaem16
    @Dhaem16 4 місяці тому +1

    "I believe we did"
    Oh, look, and suddenly it's a horror movie. But real.

  • @crazycatlady6226
    @crazycatlady6226 6 місяців тому +11

    I rarely go to the theaters to watch movies anymore, but i did go and watch this with my dad.
    And it was so worth it!
    I almost never have a movie make me feel as tense as I felt with the build up to the detonation, I caught myself practically holding my breath lol.
    The music slowed intensifying and then the complete silence after was great filmmaking.
    It was dead silent and that sadly almost never happens anymore in my experience😅
    That is also a big reason why I don’t like to go to the theaters anymore.
    The movie alone was great but I love it even more after watching a making of/behind the scenes.
    It is so interesting and impressive to see how much goes in to actually making a movie like this and doing it with practical effects in stead of it al being done digitally.

  • @theactionisthejuice2146
    @theactionisthejuice2146 6 місяців тому +34

    If you read American Prometheus, it was clear that US officials knew and had even decoded messages from Japan indicating that they knew the was was lost in May 45. On August 3rd, Truman was made aware decisively that Japan was looking for peace, with the loom of a Soviet declaration incoming. Think it’s very likely that Truman did not want a Soviet declaration to end the war, he wanted to end it himself, hence the bombs.
    Also Oppie was like you at the time, these intelligence reports were never made available to him and those in Los Alamos and assumed Japan would fight on.

    • @williambranch4283
      @williambranch4283 6 місяців тому +14

      Japan suffered a military coup to prevent surrender, that came within 5 minutes of success. As German military wanted an armistice where they got to keep most of their conquests, Japan wanted the same in Asia. The US/GB had already firebombed more civilian Germans and Japanese than the nuclear deaths. Germany had genocided (not killed) 11 million people by this point, Japan had genocided 6 million Asians.

    • @smittyDXPS3
      @smittyDXPS3 6 місяців тому +2

      This is a complete lie and a well known hoax, no evidence has been presented that the Japanese even said this, ever...
      "One might think that compelling substantiation would be necessary to support such a monstrous charge, but the revisionists have been unable to provide a single example from Japanese sources. What they have done instead amounts to a variation on the old shell game. They state in their own prose that the Japanese were trying to surrender without citing any evidence and, to show that Truman was aware of their efforts, cite his diary entry of July 18 referring to a “telegram from Jap Emperor asking for peace.” There it is! The smoking gun! But it is nothing of the sort. The message Truman cited did not refer to anything even remotely resembling surrender. It referred instead to the Japanese foreign office’s attempt (under the suspicious eyes of the military) to persuade the Soviet Union to broker a negotiated peace that would have permitted the Japanese to retain their prewar empire and their imperial system (not just the emperor) intact. No American president could have accepted such a settlement, as it would have meant abandoning the United States’ most basic war aims...
      ...An exchange I had with two revisionists, Martin Sherwin and Kai Bird, is revealing. In the December 2007 issue of Passport (newsletter of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations), I published a short critique of their Pulitzer Prize-winning American Prometheus: the Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Among other things, I accused them of resorting to “semantic jugglery” in falsely equating Truman’s diary reference to “peace” with “surrender,” and pointed out that they had failed to provide “even a wisp of evidence” that Japan was trying to surrender. In their response, Sherwin and Bird in turn accused me of dismissing a “huge body of distinguished scholarship,” but again failed to include a single example of such evidence."
      From an article by by Robert James Maddox
      Mr. Maddox, Professor of History Emeritus at Pennsylvania State University, is the editor of "Hiroshima in History: The Myths of Revisionism" (University of Missouri Press, May 2007).

    • @yohanespaskal9352
      @yohanespaskal9352 6 місяців тому +3

      Japan have to pay for pearl Harbour

    • @FranciscoHOS
      @FranciscoHOS 6 місяців тому +1

      @@yohanespaskal9352 Pearl Harbor was a horrible attack, but it was an attack on the military. The atomic bomb droppings were an attack on civilians.

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 4 місяці тому

      The Japanese military brass and oligarchy insulated the Emperor.
      The vast majority of average Japanese by 1945 just wanted to get on with their lives again.

  • @Omgbbqhaxlolol
    @Omgbbqhaxlolol 4 місяці тому

    That last line, coupled with the music is ABSOLUTELY HARROWING. I've never felt so much dread, fear, excitement, and hope at the same time as that moment in theaters. For a solid 2-3 minutes after the lights came up, nobody moved, no one made a sound. We just took it all in, thought, and collected ourselves before we left to discuss what we just witnessed.
    Personally I knew quite a bit about Oppenheimer and his involvement, as well as other physicist's involvements with the Manhattan project, but my mother with whom I saw this movie, had not. She had a laundry list of questions after the movie, and in explaining it to her, I think she kind of got the feeling's the rest of us did. Having the knowledge that I did, I already felt like this was a story of significance that people SHOULD know about. After having seen Nolan bring it to life to a degree in which I could not have anticipated my own immersion, I FIRMLY believe that every single person on this earth should learn about Oppenheimer, basic and intermediary physics, and watch this movie, to understand just what happened, and what changed when the Trinity test became real. I've never watched a movie and felt like I was there, in that moment, outside of war movies whose sole purpose is to make you feel like you're there. A bio-doc that makes you feel like you know what life was like in the early 1900s, post WW1, a world of imagined peace and growth of the species, halted by a cruel dictator, and forever changed by a scientist with a vision for the future, who's discovery was used to destroy the world we knew..... It's incredible.

  • @ophelieguay6960
    @ophelieguay6960 6 місяців тому +4

    The performance of Robert Downey Jr in Oppenheimer was the best! ❤️🔥🙌🏻

    • @annettegilbert3715
      @annettegilbert3715 5 місяців тому +1

      Cillian Murphy had the much more difficult role and he nailed it! Both were brilliant 😊

  • @balkanarchist
    @balkanarchist 6 місяців тому +32

    This film is not without its imperfections, but it's a damn fine movie based on a great book. I've seen it four times already. Sadly only once in the cinema and not in IMAX, but what can you do?

    • @crapshot
      @crapshot 6 місяців тому

      What imperfections nigga?

    • @joseramirez7629
      @joseramirez7629 6 місяців тому +4

      The nearest IMAX theater(s) was 2 - 2.5 hours away from me; 3 different locations; one in another state.
      I saw this 3 TIMES in IMAX and 1 time in standard… doesn’t hit different in regular screens, holy sh#t!!!

    • @nickavenoso7851
      @nickavenoso7851 6 місяців тому +2

      I saw it on regular film once and again on IMAX 70mm. I can say that they were incredible both times, but seeing it in IMAX was one of the best theater experiences in my lifetime, imho. I have it on blu-ray now (4K Steel-book with Blu-ray) and I’ve seen it another 2x. It’s an incredible film, imho.

  • @JamesDavis-sh9gh
    @JamesDavis-sh9gh 6 місяців тому +2

    Speaking of Rami Malek he now has starred in the top two high grossing biopics of all time: Oppenheimer and Bohemian Rhapsody.

  • @andysmith8031
    @andysmith8031 6 місяців тому +2

    The girl whose skin is peeling off her face during his speech is Christopher Nolan’s daughter.

  • @sidneyjacques.
    @sidneyjacques. 6 місяців тому +1

    44:43 was hilarious. 😂😂 i really enjoyed your reaction!

  • @numeris7609
    @numeris7609 6 місяців тому

    "He just thought 'oh, I'll kill HIM one day'. *stops blinking*
    🤣😂

  • @taiwandxt6493
    @taiwandxt6493 6 місяців тому

    If ya'll are curious, Los Alamos still exists. It still conducts nuclear weapons research and development, however it also does a lot more these days. Currently, Breast Cancer treatments are being researched and HIV vaccine research is being conducted there.

  • @sleepyghost4994
    @sleepyghost4994 6 місяців тому +7

    The fact is Japan had no resources left, russia was beginning to land troops, and they had china closing in on them. I didn't think we needed to drop the bombs at all

    • @smittyDXPS3
      @smittyDXPS3 6 місяців тому +2

      That's a ridiculous notion. The Japanese were never going to surrender unconditionally. Operation Downfall would have resulted in the deaths of an estimated 863,000 allied soldiers and an unknown amount of Japanese soldiers and citizens, but that number is likely in the millions. Without the bombs the war would have lasted at least until 1947, would have resulted in the deaths of millions, and the complete and total annihilation of Japanese culture and society.
      Please stop peddling revisionist history when you know nothing of what you speak on.

    • @jooyoungkang3858
      @jooyoungkang3858 6 місяців тому

      Operation Downfall was the proposed Allied plan for the invasion of the Japanese home islands near the end of World War II. The planned operation was canceled when Japan surrendered following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Soviet declaration of war, and the invasion of Manchuria.[1] The operation had two parts: Operation Olympic and Operation Coronet. Set to begin in November 1945, Operation Olympic was intended to capture the southern third of the southernmost main Japanese island, Kyūshū, with the recently captured island of Okinawa to be used as a staging area. In early 1946 would come Operation Coronet, the planned invasion of the Kantō Plain, near Tokyo, on the main Japanese island of Honshu. Airbases on Kyūshū captured in Operation Olympic would allow land-based air support for Operation Coronet. If Downfall had taken place, it would have been the largest amphibious operation in history, surpassing D-Day.
      Casualty predictions varied widely, but were extremely high. Depending on the degree to which Japanese civilians would have resisted the invasion, estimates ran up into the millions for Allied casualties.

  • @MikeMiller-zc1xf
    @MikeMiller-zc1xf 6 місяців тому

    Bro I loved your reaction man😂 this movie is such a masterpiece

  • @ferdig1394
    @ferdig1394 6 місяців тому +1

    Great reaction!

  • @leovictim2392
    @leovictim2392 6 місяців тому +1

    He truly did end the world the last thing he said to Einstein one day the end of our world will come

  • @Worldwide505
    @Worldwide505 5 місяців тому

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  • @RafidW9
    @RafidW9 6 місяців тому +4

    Americans justifying Hiroshima and Nagasaki has to be the lowest of lows. Disgusting.

    • @Maxime_G
      @Maxime_G 5 місяців тому

      If you're talking about the movie, it doesn't justify it AT ALL.

  • @bijoychandraroy
    @bijoychandraroy 6 місяців тому

    NGL Kitty is a homie

  • @krisellison6650
    @krisellison6650 6 місяців тому

    It's time for UA-cam react to Trinity And Beyond The Atomic Bomb Movie (1995). The soundtrack is excellent.

  • @thesevendeadlysins578
    @thesevendeadlysins578 6 місяців тому +1

    Where are you watching the movie?

    • @JasonJeffory
      @JasonJeffory  6 місяців тому +11

      I, may or may not, have a friend that works for a Movie store. They, may or may not, have already received copies. He, may or may not, let me know beforehand. So I, may or may not, have gone and gotten one.
      Allegedly.

    • @thesevendeadlysins578
      @thesevendeadlysins578 6 місяців тому +2

      @@JasonJeffory Ah, that's awesome. I was wondering if they released it early.

    • @JasonJeffory
      @JasonJeffory  6 місяців тому +5

      Sorry, but it does come out tomorrow the 21st.

  • @anandvijayan2033
    @anandvijayan2033 6 місяців тому

    Heisenberg was not Jewish

  • @2thRiteFREESPEEisAVirtueSignal
    @2thRiteFREESPEEisAVirtueSignal 6 місяців тому +2

    Another thing the film isn't going into along with the on the ground reality of the Japanese hit by the bomb is the stories of the people who were actually mining the uranium & plutonium and how they were being dealt with which is a really fascinating story. Hint: it's that land with all the natural resources that, along with the people, gets big exploited.

  • @865style
    @865style 3 місяці тому

    Great to see you know the facts. Without the atomic bomb we would of lost at least 750k soldiers. Japan would of lost T least a couple million soldiers. The bombs killed about 250k people. Yes thats alot but the bomb saved at the very least 3 million people. Because Japan would of never surrendered. As it is after the first bomb they refused to surrender. So we dropped a second bomb. Even after the second bomb most of Japan's leadership did not want to surrender. The way our government treated oppenheimer was embarrassing. He saved millions of lives with his work. Also if Germany or Russia got the bomb before us we would be here. Both wounded of killed everyone else especially hitler. So oppenheimer creating it first was a huge blessing. Because of the atomic bomb we haven't seen a world war since the bombs were dropped in 1945. If we didn't have the deterrence of nuclear weapons we would of had at least 1 more world war. Instead of losing 70-80 million people worldwide a 3rd world war would of been in the 400+ million. All of humanity owes oppenheimer a huge debt.

  • @whade62000
    @whade62000 6 місяців тому +18

    I feel like it's pretty well known that bombing was not what lead to Japan quitting and as kind of a last minute decision because a demonstration was needed. Sure, they've been preparing the bomb for a long time but they weren't sure at all if and where they'd use them. Certainly cities full of civilians rather than military targets is hard to justify. Your own opinion also seems tainted by self-justifying US propaganda.

    • @thenicesven5328
      @thenicesven5328 6 місяців тому

      yup

    • @wisemanofsorts6068
      @wisemanofsorts6068 6 місяців тому +10

      To be fair, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were massive military production cities, and were military targets.
      Had the bombs not been used it is very unlikely less civilians would have died in the alternative reality.

    • @oleander7635
      @oleander7635 6 місяців тому +1

      @@wisemanofsorts6068this is a cop out defense. almost 200,000 civilians were killed.

    • @wisemanofsorts6068
      @wisemanofsorts6068 6 місяців тому +6

      @oleander7635 And over 100,000 Japanese were dying per week in bombing runs. From a death standpoint, does it matter if they were killed by 20,000 bombs or 1 bomb?
      To me, it doesn't. But it does matter from a military psychological perspective. 1 bomb is a lot scarier. Unless the Japanese were going to surrender on the exact same date they did, its very likely that more than 200,000 civilians would have died.

    • @johnhenry4844
      @johnhenry4844 6 місяців тому +1

      No this is left wing hysteria, the Japanese military didn’t even care about the nukes, it took the civilian government and the emperor breaking the deadlock to force them to surrender,
      The nukes didn’t even bother Japan militarists that much

  • @randomusernamedandrew7663
    @randomusernamedandrew7663 6 місяців тому +76

    The thing is… the Japanese defeat was assured. It was a complete losing battle. Everything you said, especially “even that wouldn’t be enough” sounds like blatant propaganda.

    • @wisemanofsorts6068
      @wisemanofsorts6068 6 місяців тому +1

      Maybe. But the US was fite bombing hundreds of thousands of civilians daily. Using the atomic bomb resulted in the same or less civilians dead then would have been bombed regardless.

    • @johnhenry4844
      @johnhenry4844 6 місяців тому +24

      They still wanted a conditional surrender, it took the emperor to break the deadlock, the military still wanted to fight despite the nukes, they actually weren’t that impressed with the nuclear weapons,

    • @laurencia2020
      @laurencia2020 6 місяців тому +21

      Even if it was a complete losing battle, in the movie, it is mentioned that if the soldiers went on homelands of Japan (Tokyo and etc) more Americans AND Japanese lives would be lost, both soldiers and civilians

    • @thephantompenance
      @thephantompenance 6 місяців тому +29

      It was a losing battle, but the Japanese were determined to go down fighting. Like he said, if their demands weren’t met, they’d fight to the bitter end. A prolonged battle would waste time and lives, both of which can’t be taken back.

    • @top-flex2225
      @top-flex2225 6 місяців тому +13

      There were two reasons for the release of the atomic bombs:
      1)Final capitulation of japan, since the japanese empire would've never surrendered (fight till the end)
      2)Since the USA didn't want a communist korea and china because the USSR invaded japanese occupied Manchuria and korea, they wanted to speed up the process of the japanese capitulation

  • @elianamorra9852
    @elianamorra9852 6 місяців тому +9

    Americans justifying their cruelties

    • @josephgold208
      @josephgold208 6 місяців тому

      You don't read enough history and it's a war America didn't start. Everyone hated Rome at the time it was in power, go cry some place else.

    • @michalpetrilak3976
      @michalpetrilak3976 6 місяців тому

      According to what you wrote, you know nothing about the history of World War II. Look in the search engine for "unit 731" what the Japanese were doing to innocent civilians. It surpasses all the horrors of the Nazis in the concentration camps.

    • @Maxime_G
      @Maxime_G 5 місяців тому

      If you're talking about the movie, it doesn't justify it AT ALL.

  • @Rizky-Gumilar
    @Rizky-Gumilar 6 місяців тому +7

    Sad it's gonna get snubbed at oscar. academy awards hates Nolan

    • @khylechristianderosales1894
      @khylechristianderosales1894 6 місяців тому +10

      well chances are not this time

    • @dlweiss
      @dlweiss 6 місяців тому +10

      Well, more specifically, the Academy Awards often hate superhero movies and sci-fi movies - or at least they rarely consider those genres to be "great art" and worthy of awards. But this time Nolan is doing a historical biopic - a genre which the Academy notoriously LOVES more than almost anything else. So we'll have to see if that change in genre is enough to win Nolan some bigger awards.

    • @Connor8609
      @Connor8609 6 місяців тому +8

      Chances are near zero that happens...

    • @crazycatlady6226
      @crazycatlady6226 6 місяців тому

      ⁠@@Connor8609 I see what you did there