Friday, July 28, 2023

Oppenheimer: Gita on Celluloid


(PC: Universal Pictures)

You are extremely skilled. You are praised as the best of the lot. You face and win many battles. You are the main ‘man’ in the biggest battle of them all, and you are proud to be ‘the one’. Then, shit happens. Self-doubt creeps in. You ponder; reach out for help. You get it and move on.

Well, do you?

The similarities between Arjuna, hero of the epic Mahabharata, and Oppenheimer, the hero of Nolan’s eponymous epic, are uncanny in many aspects - multiple spouses/girlfriends included. 😁

Well, Arjuna had the best consultant at hand, Krishna, to help him through. Here, Oppie settles for the next best thing, the printed version of the handbook.

Whether Robert Oppenheimer wins that inner battle or not is NOT the crux of the movie. What it delves into is the way to that and the process that he goes through.

You will face trials – literally and figuratively.

You will face betrayals – inner and outer.

You will face enlightenment – Krishna vs Einstein/Truman/Kitty anyone?

(PC: New Yorker)

Oppenheimer is a fascinating peek into a complex human being who wants to kill his tutor with cyanide, is multi-talented including learning Dutch in 6 weeks so as to deliver an intricate Physics lecture, makes mistakes in math, gets involved in what he believes in - communism & human rights but pulls out from not going the whole hog, is super-confident of his abilities yet fragile, holds on to the schoolboy code of camaraderie to his own detriment, has this naiveté to believe that his actions are for the greater good despite indications otherwise, and has realization kicking in and breaks down once the fruits of his actions are out of his hand…

For those who are looking for the Gita controversy… In what could be termed as a harbinger of the destruction he is to cause, he quotes ‘I am become death, the destroyer of the world’ when in bed with a nubile Jean Tatlock. That is that.

(PC: ISKCON)

But the bigger (and better) Gita moments are when he meets President Truman...

O: Mr. President, I have blood on my hands.

T: (waving a clean white handkerchief wanting him to wipe it off), Dr. Oppenheimer, do you think the people of Hiroshima are mad at you for the bomb? They are mad at ME! (But, I had to do it!)

…and when he meets Einstein by the pond, where what the great man says makes the penny drop for Oppie, setting the path for his next many years of trials and tribulations and peace.


...and when he has only one student to teach for his first course at UC Berkeley not unlike Krishna 😌

...and when a fellow scientist wants him to remove the put-on military dress and 'be himself', one did get reminded of 'vaasaamsi jeernani' Gita, 2:22 😇

Like the Greek god Prometheus, Dr. O did give the fire of atomic weapons to humankind. But the eagle which kept eating Prometheus’ liver only for it to grow the next day, was the gnawing that Dr. O had to go through day-in and day-out, seeing the nuclear proliferation with the guilt that it was his doing.

Did you need iMAX for this? Perhaps not. As some wags pointed out, except for the 20-second Trinity test, there is nothing visually spectacular in the movie, and they keep talking and talking and talking. But therein lies the irony. The movie never sagged more due to the screenplay – alternating between the worst moment of Oppie’s life – the trial to revoke his security clearance, interestingly shot in color, and perhaps the best moment of his life – the Senate hearing of Strauss where Oppie gets kind of exonerated, again interestingly shot in black-and-white.

Potential Oscars for Cillian Murphy for acting and Nolan for best adaptation from a book. 💜

A worthy movie to watch a few times. Waiting for the OTT release to appreciate the intricacies and enjoy the spread more.

#sriGINthoughts #reviews #English #Oppenheimer #BhagavadGita


 

No comments: