Wow what a brilliant film and way of re-telling history! we were pleasantly surprised by how much we enjoyed this! Want to watch 4 weeks EARLY and access our UNCUT reactions? AND Vote for what Movie we watch next over on Patreon! www.patreon.com/spartanandpudgey
@Einherjar-DK5 ай бұрын
Nice little touch, when your own background started shaking
@deltazeroks5 ай бұрын
please watch peaky plinders at some point on the channel!
@AnimationShorts0005 ай бұрын
React to Godzilla Minus One movie please 🙏🥺
@kobarsos825 ай бұрын
This and the Dune movies were easily few of the best movies we watched in the last years. So much nuance, great acting all around and amazing cinematography to boot. I do love you guys for always choosing great quality content, this thing alone probably makes you my favorite reaction channel since the hotd/got days (well plus the amazing banter). And while the boys is a severely overrated show I do the blind eyes, most of the time you do banger after banger after all, great movie choices, even good anime (like death note), topping quality with Chernobyl and even starting True Detective and Peaky blinders series now, which are absolutely BEYOND fantastic journeys. Cheers to the fantastic australian DUO!
@Anon543878 күн бұрын
Good grief, Neils Bohr won the Noble Prize for his work in atomic and quantum physics.
@lexksa5 ай бұрын
In the ending when Oppenheimer was speaking with Einstein, that whole sequence gives me chills every time. "I believe we have". Such a great film.
@sammanacer5 ай бұрын
It's so good, never felt like that from a film before, it really feels like you're looking into an inevitable future that's coming for us and it's very scary and very real
@di34865 ай бұрын
My jaw dropped. Masterful.
@alesksander5 ай бұрын
And there was also nice post credit scene....
@jeshanew21835 ай бұрын
This, but imagine “what I’ve done” by linking park playing in the end.
@MikeBronson5155 ай бұрын
The Nukes were a necessary evil. They saved millions of Japanese, and atleast a million allied soldiers. The Japanese were starving to death, but still had a three million man army left, and were never going to surrender, with a three million man army willing to fight for the homeland. Also Nuclear weapons did create a peace the world had never seen before. They prevented the third world war, and all the wars since then haven’t even added up to how many died in WW2. Hence why it has been called the “Long Peace”. As hard as is to grasp, the invention of nukes were objectively, and overall…. a good thing. Human beings needed the guarantee of total destruction to keep themselves somewhat in check.
@turbozoid36955 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy and Robert Downey Jr. both won oscars for best actor and best supporting actor respectively for their amazing performances. Strauss for sure makes the sneaky snake tier list.
@Knightowl19805 ай бұрын
I loved Murphy winning , I wasn’t sold on RDJ though
@axr71495 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly, OPPENHEIMER (2023) is only the 6th film to win Oscars for both Actor and Supporting Actor. The other 5 were GOING MY WAY (1944) (Bing Crosby and Barry Fitzgerald), THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES (1946) (Frederic March and Harold Russell), BEN-HUR (1959) (Charlton Heston and Hugh Griffith), MYSTIC RIVER (2003) (Sean Penn and Tim Robbins), and DALLAS BUYERS CLUB (2013) (Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto). Funny how the 3 most recent films to do this achieved it in 10-year intervals, and 4 of those 6 movies also won Picture (only MYSTIC RIVER and DALLAS BUYERS CLUB have failed to win it).
@annettegilbert37155 ай бұрын
Cillian is pronounced Kilian! Phenomenal actor ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ He's fantastic in Peaky Blinders and in the dozens of Irish independent movies he's made!
@azamatlalayev47465 ай бұрын
Watching this movie in the cinema was am EXPERIENCE. At times, the whole room was shaking
@cluster_f15755 ай бұрын
It was. I saw this in IMAX & the Trinity Test scene in particular was incredible.
@Quzga5 ай бұрын
@@cluster_f1575i wish my country had IMAX.. One day I'll try it when I travel to US!
@hali_555 ай бұрын
Saw it in IMAX 3 times, hands down the best movie going experiences
@leslieturner82765 ай бұрын
Yes, I saw this in IMAX twice on the biggest screen in the UK. It was an incredible experience.
@ganondorf665 ай бұрын
The silence when the bomb exploded was actually silent it was insane
@rodrigofoli5 ай бұрын
"Can your hear the music?" by Ludwig Goransson is a masterpiece of a soundtrack. The second oscar win for this genius composer, we will hear of him for a lot of time
@jamielee79435 ай бұрын
One of my favourite films of all time. When I saw it last year it just blew me away. A 3 hour masterpiece from beginning to end. Cillian Murphy giving one of the best performances I’ve seen. What an actor!! Absolutely deserved his Oscar for Oppenheimer. I’m glad you guys enjoyed it too.
@carsonmatthews77055 ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible film. My favorite film of 2023. Quite possibly Christopher Nolan’s best film, and undeniably the career defining performances from both Cillian Murphy and Robert Downey Jr. The Academy got it right with the Oscars that they gave this movie, for Best Picture, Best Director for Christopher Nolan, Best Actor for Cillian Murphy, Best Supporting Actor for Robert Downey Jr., Original Music, Cinematography, and Editing.
@hoon_sol5 ай бұрын
Not even remotely Nolan's best film, and certainly no "career-defining" performance by either of those two actors, especially not RDJ. And best film of the year? That's a total joke. Compare it to e.g. a masterpiece like _Poor Things_ and you quickly see what total nonsense those awards have become. I'd say the only redeeming feature of the film was the soundtrack.
@MrScienceReasonLover5 ай бұрын
@@hoon_solcalm down bro, stick your tampon back in
@axr71495 ай бұрын
@@hoon_sol I personally thought POOR THINGS was the worst of the nominees, made even worse especially when compared to THE FAVOURITE (2018) from the same director. OPPENHEIMER was the 3rd best of the nominees in my view, after KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON and THE ZONE OF INTEREST. At the same time, we need to realize that art is subjective, and one person's definition of best will not align with another (for example, I think GLADIATOR (2000) is the worst film to win Best Picture) and it is broad consensus of a large group of people that ultimately determines who wins.
@hoon_sol5 ай бұрын
@@axr7149: It's clear from the way you capitalize film titles that you have absolutely zero idea what you're talking about, and when you talk about absolute steaming garbage like _Killers of the Flower Moon_ as if it somehow weren't the total trash it was, then it's even clearer that you really have zero idea about film in general. Of course trying to pull the "muh art is subjective" out of your ass is exactly what I expect from someone who tries to elevate garbage to the same level as actual cinematic art.
@vn577424 күн бұрын
@@hoon_sol Lmfao. In no universe is Poor Things a better film than Oppenheimer.
@davepresley46895 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is one of the best actors alive. And so humble, he just does his work, a few interviews and then dips back to Ireland to hang out in a random pub
@Jack.A.C5 ай бұрын
We did a whole Barbenheimer day when this came out. About 10 of us going for brunch, watching this, heading to the pub for a whiskey, going back to watch Barbie, then having dinner and cocktails. Not even joking one of the best days of my life.
@J-tp2wb5 ай бұрын
it is good 😃
@Roach_Dogg_JR4 ай бұрын
Good that you ended on Barbie lol. Ending on this movie would be a rather depressing end lol. After I watched this in theaters I spent the entire ride home imagining the world engulfed in firestorms.
@hj-ct2qiАй бұрын
I had watched footage of the real Oppenheimer speaking prior to seeing this movie. The moment Cillian Murphy opened his mouth and started speaking I gasped because I knew he'd get that Oscar. He embodied the man's speech and mannerisms flawlessly.
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is one of the greatest actors of his generation. You guys will absolutely love Peaky Blinders. Funny that you mentioned Sheldon Cooper: he once adopted cats and named them Oppenheimer, Fermi, Frisch Feynman, Teller and Zazzles 😂😂
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
9:48, One thing that I thought was very refreshing about Oppenheimer and his contemporaries is how diverse they were in their interest. Sure he was a brilliant physicist but he also had an interest in music, art, religion, history and languages. Quite often the representation of very smart people is that they are only interested in their particular field and clueless about all else. As we can see Oppenheimer was also a ladies man. Also many of the scientists Oppenheimer meets in this movie are legendary figures in the sciences. Some were his heroes and some his rivals.
@oicrusader21435 ай бұрын
I went to see this when it released and the entire cinema was dead quiet when the credits rolled. Fantastic film, fantastic ending.
@leslieturner82765 ай бұрын
Yes, that was my experience as well.
@withJordanFrank5 ай бұрын
Been watching you guys for a while and really enjoy your channel, but I think this might be my favorite post-content breakdown yet. You had a few insights that I missed that made me rethink a few things, and that's a pretty big deal for me. Thank you, you made me appreciate a film more than I did prior to watching your reaction.
@widgetgtr35965 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy’s was also in a film called 28 days later If you haven’t watched it I highly recommend it 10/10 for a zombie movie
@reesey86765 ай бұрын
Yes! I hope they do 28 Days Later, that would be great. I’d like them to watch a few zombie movies and that, horrors too. That would propel like channel too.
@vihan34235 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is incredible I was shocked to see how he was in Peaky Blinders loool he completely owned that gangster role
@dranna905 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is such an incredible actor. He can convey such emotion without uttering a word.
@andrewcrowder49585 ай бұрын
Thanks for reviewing this one. It might interest you to know that Einstein visited Japan in 1923. He lectured in Kyoto, Tokyo… and Hiroshima. Greetings from Kyoto.
@hepunk5 ай бұрын
24:24 Jason Lannister 33:08 Dr Brenner (Papa)
@gerald99925 ай бұрын
The growth of this channel and you guys in particular has been beautiful to watch... You guys have really started to appreciate the depth of art.. who would have thought spartan would be watching a heavy dialogue based movie on quantum physics 💙💙
@VikashTiwari-s6c5 ай бұрын
"We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita. Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and to impress him takes on his multi-armed form and says, “Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” I suppose we all thought that one way or another."
@ryanweintraub94485 ай бұрын
The sound design in the theater was crazy good
@acrosstheboardcinema5 ай бұрын
Don’t find many thriller biopics out there. Filmed as a historical drama, edited and scored like an action film. A rare combo of genres, Nolan and his talented team can seemingly do anything and make it grounded, compelling, visually stunning, musically epic, and downright impressive. What’s he got up his sleeve for his next project? My notifications are set.
@nglijie57165 ай бұрын
"I am become Death. The destroyer of (all) worlds." The ending of this film says it all. 😳
@TheArrowedKnee5 ай бұрын
They should watch the clip of the real Oppenheimer saying those words, it's pretty haunting
@chrisvibz47534 ай бұрын
well they havent been used since lol
@AlanCanon22225 ай бұрын
The bit about Feynman trusting the glass of the windshield stopping the UV was true. He later figured he was the only person who watched the test with the naked eye.
@jediswitajewski82715 ай бұрын
So glad u guys reacted to this masterpiece. My favourite film of last year and in my top films of all time.
@Mangolite5 ай бұрын
You’ll need to see Godzilla Minus One to get the proper sequel to Oppenheimer. Both came out in 2023.
@Oxley0165 ай бұрын
Fallout was a good sequel, was made by Chris Nolan's brother too.
@halgari5 ай бұрын
One of the saddest things to me about this movie is that I've seen examples of people like Oppenheimer in real life. People who are brilliant in their own line of work, absolute geniouses, but completely inept at basic social requirements like being a father, staying faithful to a partner, or joining a sub-culture that will get you in trouble with the government. "Embrace revolution in science, why not society as well" is so incredibly logical, but so easy to ruin someone's life. I think he's on the spectrum in some way, and I think it's a common issue with people extremely gifted like him. Once you understand the fabric of reality, it's hard to care about the constructs of culture.
@PjRjHj5 ай бұрын
In Oppenheimer's case, his sub-culture was a murderous ideology, fuelled by drunk utopian hubris, and it has yet to answer for its crimes. Millions had already died in 1930s Soviet Union directly due to the actions of communist practice.
@annettegilbert37154 ай бұрын
And yet, once he lost his security clearance he and Kitty stayed together and had another 3 children, and he took up sailing. ..the man was a great contradiction!
@fash6044 ай бұрын
41:30 how the background of them started shaking just as the film's background 😂😂😂
@m.nihal.995 ай бұрын
41:29 i see what you did there with the background…nice touch👏
@MarcoMM15 ай бұрын
Great reaction guys like always, This movie is another masterpiece from Nolan. What he has put before our eyes definitively deserves to be seen, as does Cillian Murphy's performance in the role of Oppenheimer and the irreconcilable but fantastic, but Robert Downey Jr. in the role of Lewis Strauss is in another level what a great performance truly amazing. The Trinity Test recreation was filmed without special effects, Nolan is no stranger to recreating dramatic events on the big screen but in perhaps his most ambitious move yet, the director decided to film the atomic bomb test without using any CGI or visual effects. That means what you see on screen really did take place - although on a smaller scale. The movie opens with an ominous opening caption, which reads: “Prometheus stole fire from the gods and gave it to man. For this he was chained to a rock and tortured for eternity.” The film is based on Kai Bird’s 2005 Oppenheimer biography American Prometheus and explaining the comparison, Kai writes in his book: “Like that rebellious Greek god Prometheus who stole fire from Zeus and bestowed it upon humankind, Oppenheimer gave us atomic fire. The cast lived together during filming, Nolan moved his cast and crew into digs together. Emily Blunt likened the situation to ‘summer camp’ and told People: “We were all in the same hotel in the middle of the New Mexican desert. We only had each other.” in another unusual move, Nolan wrote the script in first person in order to reflect how most of the film is being told from Oppenheimer’s perspective and using his memories. Matt Damon told in an interview: “I’ve never seen that done before. Instead of ‘Oppenheimer walks across the room,’ it’s ‘I walk across the room.’ This was a way for him to signal that, Okay, this is what the movie’s going to feel like. It’s going to feel immediate.” Keep up the good work.
@darkphoenix25 ай бұрын
I didn't expect what is essentially a biopic, based in actual history, to deliver satisfying "plot twists". All of the characters and time period changes made it hard to keep up throughout the movie but it all came to a high point in those final 30 minutes. You get the takedown of Strauss, Kitty standing up for her and her husband, and the reveal of what he and Einstein talk about, and it ends with that chilling final line.
@frankensteinmurillo4465 ай бұрын
Spartan: The Pipe and Hat is a good look right there Pudgey: we will get you one Spartan:☺️ 😂 I love you guys😂
@annettegilbert37154 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is my favourite actor! Im a retired ballet dancer and I can see how, because he is such a phenomenal stage actor, he can really change his whole appearance. In none his roles, does he look or sound the same. As Emily Blunt says, he's very clever. Do watch his other movies... many of them are Irish or British productions...watch him in Breakfast on Pluto as a transgender woman, then watch him in Red Eye and the Wind That Shakes the Barley... it's almost inconceivable that it's the same man in each film, and that these movies were made in only 18 months. Then he's completely different in Sunshine and as for Peaky Blinders...well!!! The list goes on . I really admire him ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ .
@mimic19845 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy KILLED IT in this one, can barely say I'm surprised though. 💜
@der48151623425 ай бұрын
what u got right is the short o in oppenheimer. what you got wrong is the c in cillian murphy - it's pronounced like a k
@anuragC8195 ай бұрын
Love the Aussie accent! 11:04 "I KNOOOOOOOOOOOERRRRRRR!"
@ernieojeda5 ай бұрын
I'm glad I seen this in IMAX multiple times. It was a beautiful movie
@Aurich885 ай бұрын
Nolan did something interesting with the color. The color segments represented the subjective "story" version of the movie, from Oppenheimer's perspective and how he wants to be remembered. The B&W scenes represent a more objective account, using only the things in the historical record. The color scenes paint a sympathetic portrait of a complicated man, and the B&W scenes portray an opportunistic power-grabber. Though Strauss is the villain of the movie, many of the things he said were factually correct. Taken together, the movie shows the struggle in understanding Oppenheimer's life and motivations.
@socialanxietv1405 ай бұрын
I'm sure somebody else has mentioned it but Cillian is pronounced Killian.
@hotsauce692475 ай бұрын
6:36 “Similar to my brain” …🤨”Please” You guys are funny 😂
@jeronomojoe5 ай бұрын
I saw this in IMAX which is an extra level of immersion. Huge screen that wraps around the audience and curves from top to bottom. Almost like a half dome. The speakers are LOUD and definitely way too loud during the previews but when the drums are ramping up tension and that otherworldy soundtrack is playing with those atomic visuals it was nothing short of a Religious experience.
@Kevin.Costner.5 ай бұрын
Billion dollar box office R Rated without action like deadpool just Dialogue🐐 Nolan ended the Director Goat debate that night
@Kevin.Costner.5 ай бұрын
+ 3 Hours and a bit
@andrewcrowder49585 ай бұрын
Yeah, imagine the pitch meeting. Nolan: "I want to make a three-hour, R-rated movie mostly about mathematics and politics. And a third of it will be in black and white. And I'm shooting it in IMAX." Studio: ....
@daytrippera5 ай бұрын
Watching this movie in IMAX was an amazing experience. The score by Goransson is just sublime.
@WatcherD245 ай бұрын
You guys are becoming real science nerds. I love it ;)
@cris.ouitty5 ай бұрын
this really makes me realise you two should watch A Beautiful Mind as well! perhaps a cheeky Good Will Hunting one day too? ^_^
@derangedberger5 ай бұрын
The cyanide apple incident is attested from several sources about Oppenheimer, but his living family says that it never happened. We don't know for sure that it happened, but to me it makes sense that his family would want to say it didn't happen.
@brianne33275 ай бұрын
What Cillian Murphy can convey through his eyes and facial expressions is absolutely incredible! He is the next Daniel Day Lewis. Both Irish btw.
@Antrod5 ай бұрын
The beauty of this film. When the bomb goes off there are so many emotions it makes you cry. I cried honestly. The beauty of that shot, seeing the particles connecting and everything reacting. You have no music, its just the beautiful scene infront of you. Than reality hits. This was real. This at one point wasnt CGI or film. This was real. We did this. What have we done? What did we do? Its such a beautiful, and terrifying film.
@samn19525 ай бұрын
I’m the extra playing cards at 34:43 😂
@SpartanandPudgey5 ай бұрын
haha are you actually? that's pretty cool!
@samn19525 ай бұрын
@@SpartanandPudgey Yes! I worked at Los Alamos and they wanted real scientists to play the background scientists.
@mahadaalvi5 ай бұрын
@@samn1952Lol spill the secrets on Bob Lazar
@Alookatportland5 ай бұрын
31:12 I love this line because I feel like it’s essentially the thesis for the whole film.
@groov3hero5 ай бұрын
Very rarely does a movie live up to the hype. It's a masterclass in pacing and pathos with some of the most magnetic and memorable performances in recent memory.
@aj8975 ай бұрын
55:35 Laughing in a moment like that…… she clearly doesn’t understand the tone.
@rickjohnson57524 ай бұрын
One of the best Nolan films, first time I heard reviews people were saying "its just so much dialogue. But I thought the dialogue was perfectly paced and suspenseful all the way to the end. Maybe the best Nolan film.
@DiegoDeschain5 ай бұрын
Yeah, at this point you'd think people would've stopped underestimating you guys, like you were incapable of enjoying anything slightly more sophisticated. Great reaction as always.
@flixandclips5 ай бұрын
Ludwig Göransson's score is so good!! Smooth and haunting at the same time!
@u3pog4o5 ай бұрын
That scene with Oppenheimer and Einstein is like "The Avengers", but for people who know the multiplication table.
@andrewcrowder49585 ай бұрын
And Kurt Gödel.
@PjRjHj5 ай бұрын
Don't be that guy
@lolmao5005 ай бұрын
Another great movie with Cillian Murphy : Sunshine.
@zaincassis26125 ай бұрын
The apple symbolizes knowledge, and Oppenheimer poisoning it, symbolizes poisoned knowledge. As in dangerous, world changing discovery.
@ian33145 ай бұрын
This was wonderful to watch with you guys. Thanks for the cool content!
@coniston31065 ай бұрын
"This guy's always sweating" had me dead
@JNB07235 ай бұрын
5:55 Niels Bohr might be a familiar name from high school chemistry class... he founded the Bohr Model of the atom, the model that stated that electrons orbit the nucleus of an atom at fixed energy levels, with different distance orbits requiring different amounts of energy to move between, and the excess energy the movement creates releases photons (energy). 20:48 yes, the Manhattan Project cost around 2 billion dollars at the time. 38:05 over 200K people died due to the explosion and the cancer from the radiation zone in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nothing like a little nuclear holocaust to make existential anxiety return in todays climate.
@redviper68055 ай бұрын
The surviving author of the book it’s based on met the cast and crew. According to Murphy, American Prometheus was required reading for the movie. There is an Oppenheimer documentary on Peacock called To End all Wars, people being interviewed include the Director and the surviving author. You two might like it
@jaycobherr89962 ай бұрын
This movie was meant to be seen in the biggest and loudest imax screen it was fucking crazy
@chrisb.21785 ай бұрын
Did you notice, that Haakon Chevalier was played by the same actor who played Tyland and Jason Lannister in HotD?
@deinmaoremodu3265 ай бұрын
Haha I just noticed too! He’s really good
@jandehaan74454 ай бұрын
Oppie! Oppie!
@BossAttack5 ай бұрын
Film is probably Nolan's best script, it is incredibly dense and setups and calls back earlier lines repeatedly. I think the most important line of the film is when Oppenheimer is teaching Quantum Mechanics, and he asks whether Light exists as a wave or a particle. And then answers that it is both, which is paradoxical, but true. And that line essentially encapsulates Oppenheimer's entire character. He's someone that built the Atomic Bomb, but refuses take have responsibility over the inevitable arms race. He's for developing an A-Bomb which kills hundreds of thousands, but is against building a Hydrogen Bomb. He's a communist, and yet also a capitalist. A family man and a womanizer. He lives a life of contradictions to the point that not even he can adequately explain his own actions and beliefs. And so we are left examining a man no one can fully understand.
@arielsteinsaltz19565 ай бұрын
One other note about Oppenheimer's motivations--the fact that he was Jewish. I appreciated the movie including the quote "It's not your people they're putting into camps, it's mine," but wish they had explored that aspect of his motivation a little more.
@bluesmoke85 ай бұрын
The chain reaction he was scared of was a lot worse then he thought was the best part of this movie
@ElkayEQ5 ай бұрын
You kids might enjoy the film, "A Beautiful Mind" starring Russel Crowe in a roll that will surprise you. It's a great film that won numerous Academy Awards (back when that meant something), numerous Critics Choice awards and a truckload of others. Like Oppenheimer, it's based on a true story and while they got a few things wrong (you have to when making a film if only for brevity) but they got most of it head on. Love your channel. Cheers!
@Julian-to7ro5 ай бұрын
Thanks for your reaction, you both are very intelligent and curious 😀
@doctormahrio52264 ай бұрын
I already love you guys. You two and "Suzy and Steejo" both have good chemistry when reacting to movies. Not to be the American over here: but your the Australian version of Suzy and Steejo.
@fifoamericana2 ай бұрын
I love that scene just after Trinity bomb(test bomb) explode with success, where they are celebrating, show Richard Feynman playing a Bongos. Richard Feynman which is a hero for Sheldon Cooper from the Big Bang Theory, played Bongos as well and quoted "Richard Feynman played the bongos" S5E18.
@user-gy8eu9wh9d5 ай бұрын
This was an indescribable piece to experience at the cinema! I’ll remember how I felt watching it forever. Amazing, chilling work! What an incredible movie.
@Knightowl19805 ай бұрын
I think this is such a brilliantly done film, for its subject matter, it just ramps up, and keeps your attention.
@andrewcrowder49585 ай бұрын
One thing that I like about Oppenheimer is that it shows both he and Turing both had connections to poisoned apples. And both were discarded and destroyed by their countries after their usefulness is done. Note also the Biblical symbolism around the Garden of Eden, and humanity's exile from it -- both snake and apple being mentioned in the same scene.
@kobarsos825 ай бұрын
Cillian Murphy is an absolutely INSANELY good actor. Watch the movie "28 days later". One of the best thrillers out there!!
@priscillapicolita70403 ай бұрын
She’s not wrong .. billions and billions have been affected by this incident so your math is correct Pudgey
@Stable_Delerium5 ай бұрын
Score for this movie is brilliant. Glad you guys noticed it. Ludwig Goransson also did The Mandalorian, Black Panther, and Creed. The score for Oppenheimer won him an Academy Award. 😊
@adambencze84095 ай бұрын
This film had such a big impact on me like an atomic bomb. At the end of the film, I was shaking and crying without any reason. It was shocking and at the same time and increadibly awsome. I can't discribe properly how many emotions were running through me.
@J-tp2wb5 ай бұрын
It's a really really great movie with great actors and an amazing soundtrack! I watched it twice in Cinema and the vibrations and Sound effects...just awesome...and then this ending...
@NPA10015 ай бұрын
The sound in the IMAX theatre where I saw this movie was incredible.. the moment the blast and sound wave hits the scientists during the Trinity test … they must have turned every speaker in the Theatre up to maximum and pointed then all directly at the audience, the sound of the blast felt like it blew you back down into your seat.
@dquanissavage62875 ай бұрын
Spartan & Pudgey Such A Awesome Video Today!!🔥🐐🐐💎
@joshb83025 ай бұрын
34:15 "Take in the sheets" because there will be radioactive dust in the air.
@asbhm20245 ай бұрын
Great movie choice! Love from England
@Durran1965 ай бұрын
You addressed niels bohr as 'this guy' 😮😅
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
37:25, In his famous song "Russians", the singer Sting lamented "How can I save my little boy from Oppenheimer's deadly toy?" This is it when it became reality. To be honest I'm more worried about Teller's more deadly toy the hydrogen bomb, which uses an atomic bomb to kick off an even more powerful explosion.
@TheDylanHoang5 ай бұрын
It really was a special delight to watch this in IMAX theatres, especially when the bomb went off, people were silent and glued. You're totally robbed of that moment when you watch at home. Being in the cinemas forces you (if you're respectful), to be quiet and and absorb the moment as the characters are. At home it really doesn't hit the same. This movie, and plenty of others obviously, have so many emotional beats where a silent reaction is more appropriate and impactful and doesn't require commentary or a remark. Fun reaction nonetheless though!
@Harry3475 ай бұрын
Yo, Imagine had they casted Bryan cranston for Heisenberg here😅😂... Would have been a slick move
@jeremypage33705 ай бұрын
Great reaction as usual! As I've gone back through Nolans films, I've noticed that almost every one of them (with the exception of Batman) reflect his obsession with time. I'm sure it's been brought up before by people much smarter than myself, but especially his movies interstellar, Tenet, inception, and memento really chew over time and it's meaning.
@Myles7205 ай бұрын
Amazing in the IMAX theater. I always make it a point to go see Nolan’s film in the theater and if possible IMAX.
@keenanfrett13435 ай бұрын
15:36 … that’s not an interesting perspective. That’s what really is.
@Honkeydoodle2 ай бұрын
You saw him for the first time in `28 Days Later`, except you haven`t seen `28 Days Later`.
@MichaelM-uw3mk3 ай бұрын
15:00 "Cities BOMBED, riggghhttttt. The germans used BOMBS. And the atom bomb is a BOMB. So they have to build an atom BOMB" This is no joke the worst I've ever seen a reactor do on camera.
@sarielxd5 ай бұрын
Greetings from Poland
@Josh86_5595 ай бұрын
According to Google map I live 22mins from where Oppenheimer taught in college at Cal Berkeley. Learning about Oppenheimer in school was big here
@TheoMurpse5 ай бұрын
I think when Spartan said Missight and questioned whether it was even a word, he was thinking of misperception
@erod90885 ай бұрын
And now you're about to watch Peaky Blinders? You're going to build a statue of Cillian Murphy in your living room soon.
@KD-cd2ck5 ай бұрын
I think the President Truman scene went over your heads
@trevorlarsonn5 ай бұрын
One of the best movies in a long time. Christopher does it again, what a legend