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OppenheimerScript.js
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enviarScript(`
OPPENHEIMER MOVIE SCRIPT
.........
Dr. Oppenheimer.
Dr. Oppenheimer.
As we begin, I believe you have a statement to read into the record.
Yes, your honor.
We’re not judges, Doctor.
No.
Members of the security board, the so-called interrogatory information in your indictment of me cannot be fairly understood except in the context of my life, and my work.
How long did he testify?
Honestly, I forget.
The whole hearing took a month.
An ordeal.
Oh, I’ve only read the transcripts.
Who’d want to justify their whole life?
You weren’t there?
As chairman, I wasn’t allowed to be.
Are they really going to ask about it?
It was years ago.
Four years ago.
Five.
Oppenheimer still divides America.
The committee’s going to want to know where you stood.
Senator Thurmond asked me to say not to feel that you’re on trial.
Oh, funny. I didn’t, until you just said that.
Really, Mr. Strauss…
It’s Admiral.
Admiral. Admiral Strauss, this is a formality.
President Eisenhower has asked you to be in his cabinet.
The Senate really has no choice but to confirm him.
And if they bring up Oppenheimer?
When they bring up Oppenheimer, you answer honestly, no senator can deny you did your duty.
It’ll be uncomfortable.
Who’d want to justify their whole life?
Why did you leave the United States?
I… I wanted to study the new physics.
Was there nowhere here?
I thought Berkeley had the leading theoretical physics department.
Yes, once I built it.
But first I had to go to Europe.
I went to Cambridge, to study under Patrick Blackett.
Were you happier there than in America?
Happier?
Yes.
No.
No, I, uh…
I was homesick and… emotionally immature…
Troubled by visions of a… hidden universe.
Useless in the lab.
Christ, Oppenheimer.
Have you had any sleep?
Start again.
I need to go to a lecture, sir.
Why?
It’s Niels Bohr.
I completely forgot.
Alright! Let’s go.
Oh no, not you, Oppenheimer.
You finish coating those plates.
Quantum physics is not a step forward.
It is a new way to understand reality.
Einstein’s opened the door.
Now we are peering through, seeing a world inside our world, a world of energy and paradox that not everyone can accept.
You alright?
Nils, meet J. Robert Oppenheimer.
What’s the J stand for?
Nothing, apparently.
You were at my lecture. You asked the only good question.
No one’s denying his insight.
It’s his laboratory work that leaves a little to be desired.
I heard you give the same answer…
At Harvard, yes, and you asked the same question.
Why ask again?
I hadn’t liked your answer.
Did you like it better yesterday?
A lot.
You can lift a stone without being ready for the snake that’s revealed.
Now it seems you’re ready.
But you don’t enjoy the lab.
So get out of Cambridge, with its beakers and potions.
Go somewhere they’ll let you think.
Where?
Göttingen.
Born.
Born.
Get to Germany, study under Max Born, learn the ways of theory.
I’ll send word.
Worm hole.
How’s your mathematics?
Not good enough for the physicist he wants to be.
NIELS BOHR: Algebra’s like sheet music, the important thing isn’t can you read music, it’s can you hear it. Can you hear the music, Robert?
J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER: Yes, I can.
The senator from Wyoming.
Admiral Strauss, I’m interested in your relationship with Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.
You met him in 1947.
Correct.
You were a commissioner of the Atomic Energy Commission.
I was, but I actually met Robert in my capacity as board member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. It was… after the war, he was world-renowned as the great man of physics, and I was determined to get him to run the Institute.
Dr. Oppenheimer. An honor.
Mr. Strauss.
It’s pronounced “Strauss”.
“Oppenheimer”, “Oppenheimer”…
Either way you say it, they know I’m Jewish.
I’m president of Temple Emanu-El in Manhattan.
“Strauss” is just a Southern pronunciation.
Anyway, welcome to the Institute. I think you’ll be very happy here.
Yes, well, you’ll love the commute.
The position comes with that house for you and your wife, and your… is it two children?
Yes, two.
I’m a great admirer of your work.
You’re a physicist by training, Mr. Strauss?
I’m sorry, uh, common room, four o’clock tea.
No, I’m not trained in physics or anything else.
I’m a self-made man.
Ah, I can relate to that.
Really?
Yes, my father was one.
And this would be your office.
I’m told he’s there in most afternoons.
You know, I’ve always wondered why you didn’t involve him in the Manhattan Project.
Greatest scientific mind of our time.
Of his time.
Einstein published his Theory of Relativity more than 40 years ago now.
Could never embrace the quantum world it revealed.
“God doesn’t play dice.”
Precisely.
You never thought of studying physics formally, Mr. Strauss?
I had offers, but… I chose to sell shoes.
Lewis Strauss was once a lowly shoe salesman.
No, just a shoe salesman.
I’d love to introduce you.
No need.
I’ve known him for years.
Albert.
What was that? What did you say to him?
Oh, he’s fine.
Mr. Strauss, there are… things in my past you ought to be aware of.
Well, as chairman of the AEC, I have access to your security file. I’ve read it.
You’re not worried?
No.
Why would I be worried, after everything you’ve done for your country?
Well, times change, Mr. Strauss.
Well, the purpose of this institute is to provide a haven for independent minds.
That’s you.
You are the man for the job.
Well, then I’ll consider it.
I’ll see you at the AEC meeting tomorrow.
This is one of the most prestigious appointments in the country.
Yes, and a great commute.
That’s why I’m considering it.
So Dr. Oppenheimer brought your attention to his past associations before you appointed him?
Yes.
And they didn’t concern you?
Just then I was entirely consumed with what he must have said to Einstein to sour him on me.
But later?
Well, we all know what happened later.
Doctor, your time in Europe, you seem to meet with a wide range of other countries’ physicists.
Yes, that’s right.
Any Russians?
None that spring to mind. If you’ll just allow me to continue with my statement…
Mr. Robb, you’ll have ample opportunity to cross-examine.
After Göttingen, I moved on to Leiden, in Holland, where I first met Isidor Rabi.
Excuse me.
A yank. Lecturing on the new physics.
This I have to hear.
I’m an American myself.
How surprising.
Let me know if you need any help with the English.
Wait, what’s he saying?
No, thank you.
It’s a long way to Zurich.
If you get any skinnier, we’re gonna lose you between the seat cushions.
I’m Rabi.
Oppenheimer.
I caught your lecture on molecules.
Caught some of it.
We’re a couple of New York Jews, how do you know Dutch?
Well, I thought I’d better learn it when I got here this semester.
You learned enough Dutch in six weeks to give a lecture on quantum mechanics?
I like to challenge myself.
Quantum physics wasn’t challenging enough.
Shvitzer.
Shvitzer?
Show-off.
Dutch in six weeks, but you never learned Yiddish.
They don’t speak it so much my side of the park.
Screw you.
You homesick?
Oh, you know it.
Ever get the feeling our kind isn’t entirely welcome here?
Physicists?
That’s funny.
Not in the department.
They’re all Jewish, too.
Eat.
There’s this German you have to seek out.
Heisenberg.
Right.
One might be led to the presumption that behind the quantum world there still hides a real world in which causality holds, but such speculations seem to us, to say it explicitly, fruitless.
Thank you. Have a great day.
Wonderful.
Thank you.
Dr. Oppenheimer.
Oppenheimer, yes!
I liked your paper on molecules.
Probably because you inspired it.
If I inspire anything else, let me know. We could publish together.
I have to get back to America.
Why?
There’s no one there taking quantum mechanics seriously.
That’s exactly why.
He’s pining for the canyons of Manhattan.
Canyons of New Mexico.
You’re from New Mexico?
No, New York.
But my brother and I have a ranch outside Santa Fe.
That’s the America I miss right now.
Then it’s best you get home, cowboys.
That’s him.
No, me and horses?
I don’t think so.
Nice to meet you.
Did you ever encounter Heisenberg again?
Not in person, no, but… you might say our paths crossed.
On returning to America, I accepted positions at both Caltech and up at Berkeley.
Dr. Lawrence, I presume?
You must be Oppenheimer.
Yes.
I hear you want to start a school of quantum theory.
I am starting it, next door.
They put you in there?
I asked for it.
Wanted to be close to you experimentalists.
Theory will get you only so far.
We’re building a machine to accelerate electrons.
Magnificent.
Would you like to help?
Build it? Oh, no. No, no.
But I am working on theories I’d like to test with it.
When do you start teaching?
I’ve got my first in an hour.
Seminar?
Pupil.
One student? That’s it?
I’m teaching something no one here has dreamt of.
But once people start hearing what you can do with it…
There’s no going back.
Oh, I must have missed the…
Mr. Lomanitz?
Yeah.
Yes, this is it.
Please, take a seat.
What do you know about quantum mechanics?
I have a grasp on the basics.
Then you’re doing it wrong.
Is life made up of particles or waves?
Quantum mechanics says it’s both. How can it be both?
It can’t.
It can’t.
But it is.
It’s paradoxical, and yet, it works.
Thank you.
Mr. Lomanitz. You’re gonna be okay.
Mr. Snyder.
Now, let’s consider a star.
A star, a vast furnace burning in outer space, fire pushing outwards against its own gravity, balanced.
But if that furnace cools, and gravity starts winning, it contracts.
Density increases.
Correct.
Increasing gravity.
Increasing density.
And?
It’s a vicious cycle until…
What’s the limit here?
I don’t know. See where the math takes us.
I guarantee it’s somewhere no one’s been before us.
Me?
Yes, you. Your math is better than mine.
Dr. Oppenheimer’s file contained details of his activities at Berkeley.
Why would they have started a file on Dr. Oppenheimer before the war?
Well, you’d have to ask Mr. Hoover.
I’m asking you, Admiral Strauss.
Uh, my assumption is that it was connected to his, uh, left-wing political activities.
You shouldn’t let them bring their politics in the classroom, Oppie.
I wrote that.
Lawrence, you embraced the revolution in physics.
Can’t you see it everywhere else?
Picasso, Stravinsky, Freud, Marx.
Well, this is America, Oppie. We had our revolution.
Seriously, keep it out of the lab.
Well, out of the lab, my landlady is having a discussion group tonight.
Interested?
I have sampled the Berkeley political scene.
It’s all just philosophy post-grads and communists talking integration.
You don’t care about integration?
I want to vote for it, not talk about it.
Especially on a Friday. Come on, let’s eat.
I’m meeting my brother there.
And how would these activities have come to the attention of the FBI?
Well, if I remember correctly, the FBI was taking license plates outside suspected communist gatherings, and his name popped up.
Jesus Christ!
Sorry.
Frank!
Uh, you remember Jackie?
Evening.
Robert! I want you to meet Chevalier.
Dr. Haakon Chevalier, Dr. Robert Oppenheimer.
Pleasure.
Pleasure.
This is my little brother, Frank.
And this is…
Still Jackie.
Hello, Still Jackie.
Chevalier, you’re in languages?
And your reputation precedes you.
What have you heard?
That you’re teaching a radical new approach to physics I have no chance of understanding, but I haven’t heard you’re a party member.
Uh, I’m not.
Oh, not yet.
Frank and I are thinking of joining.
Just the other day I was saying…
I support a range of causes.
Spanish Civil War?
A democratic republic being overthrown by fascist thugs.
Who wouldn’t?
Our government.
They think that socialism is a bigger threat than fascism.
Not for long. Look at what the Nazis are doing to the Jews.
I send funds to colleagues in Germany to emigrate.
I have to do something.
My own work is so… abstract.
What are you working on?
What happens to stars when they die?
Do stars die?
Well, if they do, they’d cool, then collapse.
In fact, the bigger the star, the more violent its demise.
Their gravity gets so concentrated, it swallows everything.
Everything, even light.
Can that really happen?
The math says it can.
If we can get published, then perhaps one day an astronomer finds one.
But right now, all I have is theory, which can’t impact people’s lives.
Well, if you’re going to send money to Spain, do it through the Communist Party.
They can get it to the front lines.
Mary sent me with these.
I’m Jean.
Robert.
Haakon Chevalier. That union meeting at Serber’s last month.
Right, right, yes.
Oh, thank you.
Robert here says he’s not a communist.
Well, then he doesn’t know enough about it.
Oh, I’ve read Das Kapital, all three volumes.
Does that count?
It would make you better-read than most party members.
Turgid stuff. There’s some thinking, um…
“Ownership is theft.”
Property.
Property?
Property, not ownership.
I’m sorry, I read it in the original German.
It’s not about the book. It’s about the ideas.
And you sound uncommitted.
I’m committed to thinking freely about how to improve our world.
Why limit yourself to one dogma?
You’re a physicist. Do you pick and choose rules?
Or do you use the discipline to channel your energies into progress?
I like a little wiggle room.
Do you always toe the party line?
I like my wiggle room, too.
What?
Wait, wait, wait.
Unexpected.
What?
For a physicist.
You only have a shelf full of Freud?
Well, actually, my background’s more…
Jungian?
You know analysis?
When I was in post-grad at Cambridge, I had a little trouble.
I’ll bite.
I tried to poison my tutor.
Did you hate him?
I liked him very much.
You just needed to get laid.
It took my analysts two years, and I don’t think they ever put it that succinctly.
You have everyone convinced you’re more complicated than you actually are.
We’re all simple souls, I guess.
I’m not.
What’s this?
Sanskrit.
You can read this?
I’m learning.
Read this.
Well, in this part, Vishnu reveals his multi-armed self…
No.
Read the words.
J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER: “And now I am become Death… destroyer of worlds.”
This’ll do.
It’ll break before dawn.
Air cools overnight.
Just before dawn, it breaks.
Well, so, I’m getting married.
Frank! congratulations!
Thank you, thank you.
To Jackie?
Yeah, to Jackie.
The waitress?
Oppie, you’re right. It’s letting up.
I’m gonna go see if there’s any stars.
All your talk about the common man, but Jackie’s not good enough for you, hmm?
We joined the party, and you can’t hide your disappointment.
Why? Is that because that’s supposed to be your thing?
I haven’t joined the party, Frank.
And I don’t think she should have convinced you to either.
Half of the faculty is communist.
Not that half.
I’m your brother, Frank, and I want you to be cautious.
And I want to wring your neck.
I won’t live my life afraid to make a mistake.
You’re happy… I’m happy.
So then I’m happy you’re happy that I’m happy.
I feel like I can see one of those dark stars that you’re working on.
You can’t.
That’s the whole point. Their gravity swallows light.
It’s like a kind of hole in space.
Is Frank okay?
Yes. He just has a shitty brother.
It is special here.
When I was a kid… I thought if I could find a way… to combine physics and New Mexico, my life would be perfect.
Little remote for that.
Yes.
Let’s get some sleep.
That mesa we saw today, one of my favorite places in the world.
Tomorrow we’ll climb it.
What’s it called?
Los Alamos.
I didn’t expect to see you today.
Do I have to make an appointment?
Alvarez?
Oppie! Oppie!
What? What is it?
They’ve done it.
They’ve done it. Hahn and Strassmann in Germany.
They split the uranium nucleus.
How?
Bombard it with neutrons.
It’s a nuclear fission.
They did it. They split the atom.
That’s not possible.
I’m gonna try to reproduce it.
See? Can’t be done.
Very elegant.
Quite clear.
There’s just one problem.
Where?
Next door.
Alvarez did it.
And look.
These fission pulses, they’re massive.
I’ve seen 30 of these in the past ten minutes.
Theory will take you only so far.
During the process… extra neutrons boil off, which could be used to split other uranium atoms.
Chain reaction.
You’re thinking what I’m thinking.
You, me, and every other physicist around the world who’s seen the news.
I just… what, what are we all thinking?
A bomb, Alvarez.
A bomb.
I told you, Robert, no more fucking flowers.
I don’t understand what you want from me.
I don’t want anything from you!
Well, you say that, and then you call.
Well, don’t answer.
I’ll always answer.
Fine.
Just no more flowers.
You’re not coming?
You have to know when you’re beaten, Robert.
It’s not that simple, Haak.
Chevalier, good to see you. Barbara, good to see you.
And the illustrious Dr. Oppenheimer.
I’m Eltenton.
Oh, pleasure.
Please, please.
Why don’t you say a word about organized labor on campuses?
Yes? Coming through, coming through!