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Should Oppenheimer Have Shown Hiroshima & Nagasaki? Controversial Debate Explained & Why It Didn't [1]

['Sarah Hurtado Rodriguez', 'Andy Behbakht', 'Thomas Bacon', 'Alexander Valentino', 'Stephen Holland', 'Cathal Gunning']

Date: 2023-07-24 14:40:22+00:00

Warning: Contains SPOILERS for Oppenheimer.

Summary Christopher Nolan's biopic Oppenheimer has sparked debate by not directly depicting the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The decision to exclude the bombings divided critics, with some arguing that the Japanese victims should have been given a voice.

Nolan's reasoning for not showing the bombings was to stay true to Oppenheimer's limited perspective and to avoid exploitative and sensationalized portrayals.

The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki aren't depicted in director Christopher Nolan’s biopic Oppenheimer, sparking debate over whether the movie should have handled this historic event with more care. In 1945, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki killed between 150,000 and 200,000 civilians. Two Japanese cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were bombed by the United States military. In the decades since these bombings, debate has raged over whether the events constitute a war crime or a crime against humanity. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the focus of Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, was central to the development of the atomic bombs used in the bombings of both cities.

While Oppenheimer has been critically acclaimed, some reviewers have taken exception to the movie’s failure to directly depict the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Since Oppenheimer himself was instrumental in the creation of the weapon and later became known as the father of the atomic bomb, it stands to reason that some viewers were surprised to see no depictions of the devastation that Oppenheimer’s invention wrought. That said, Nolan noted that his biopic was intended to illustrate the internal life of Oppenheimer alone. As Oppenheimer was unable to conceive of the barbaric enormity of murdering an entire civilian population in an instant, the bombings couldn’t appear onscreen.

Oppenheimer Not Showing Hiroshima & Nagasaki Has Stirred A Lot Of Debate

Since Oppenheimer was released, the debate over the decision to exclude the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has split critics online. Some commentators argued that the Japanese victims of Oppenheimer’s invention should have been given a voice in the movie’s story. Others argued that depicting Japanese characters only via the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki would have amounted to a tasteless exploitation of their horrific fate. Oppenheimer’s adaptation of American Prometheus touches on both the professional and personal life of the physicist and depicts the decision-makers within the US military who approved the bombing. However, some felt this depiction of the event felt incomplete.

The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have been depicted onscreen over the decades, although few works recreated the events. Renzo Kinoshita's 1978 short film Picadon depicts the effect of the bomb on the city’s civilian population, while Hideo Sekigawa’s 1953 film Hiroshima showed the day of the bombing from the perspective of local citizens. With a large budget and an experienced director, Oppenheimer was a rare opportunity for a blockbuster to devote screen time to this infamous crime. Nolan’s work on Dunkirk proved he can effectively depict the brutality of war, but this doesn’t necessarily mean the director could bring the unique inhumanity of a nuclear blast to life.

Why Oppenheimer Doesn't Show What Happened In Hiroshima & Nagasaki

Nolan briefly explained to Indiewire that he chose not to depict the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as this would take the movie outside of Oppenheimer’s perspective. Per Nolan, “We know so much more than he did at the time. He learned about the bombings… on the radio, the same as the rest of the world.” Since the biopic centers itself on its subject, Oppenheimer only morally objects to what happened after the fact. The scientist's initial detachment from the hideous potential of the atomic bomb is part of the movie’s point, as viewers are forced to contend with the idea that Oppenheimer didn't imagine its impact on civilians.

Part of Nolan’s reasoning for Oppenheimer’s CGI-free story was that the director wanted the scientist’s life story to feel tangible and grounded. As such, there was an inherent risk of the movie depicting countless innocent Japanese civilians being gruesomely killed without first exploring their lives, their dreams, and the individual human existences that were cut short in a matter of seconds by Oppenheimer’s invention. The depth that a cinematic exploration of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki deserves would require both the length and sustained focus of 1985’s Shoah, not a few scenes within the larger life story of an individual partially responsible for their mass murder.

Oppenheimer's Criticisms Are Understandable - But Were They Also Unavoidable?

It's easy to see why the criticisms of Oppenheimer exist. After all, Nolan’s biopic is about the man who created an invention that left an indelible mark on Japan’s history and an equally indelible stain on the international legacy of the United States. Despite this, Japanese characters have no agency in the narrative. However, if Nolan's atomic bomb depictions extended to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Oppenheimer would have rightly been criticized for not exploring the event enough. As such, the question to ask is whether Nolan could win either way. If Oppenheimer didn’t depict the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the movie could be accused of whitewashing history.

However, if Oppenheimer had depicted the bombings, the movie would have been accused of cheaply reducing one of the greatest atrocities in human history to a blockbuster set-piece. Depicting the bombings risked looking cheap and exploitative given how difficult it is to simultaneously do justice to the life stories of 200,000 people. Making a movie about the inventor of the atomic bomb, a weapon used to decimate a civilian population, always carried this risk. Oppenheimer’s depiction of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki could only have succeeded if the movie devoted as much focus and screen time to the bomb’s victims as its creator.

Oppenheimer Couldn’t Do Hiroshima and Nagasaki Justice

By being a relatively mainstream, accessible Hollywood biopic, Oppenheimer could not handle the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki tactfully. Authentically recreating Oppenheimer’s viewpoint, which Nolan opted to do, involved telling a story of a handful of phenomenally powerful American men facilitating the execution of 200,000 Japanese civilians without ever encountering a Japanese person during this process. Oppenheimer including another atomic bomb sequence involving the death of hundreds of thousands of civilians could not have felt like more than a tasteless spectacle unless the biopic focused on the bomb’s victims, at which point it would cease to be a biopic of Oppenheimer.

Artists have successfully wrestled with the impact of the atom bomb’s invention over the decades. Picadon’s deeply unsettling deception of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has been endlessly influential in the decades since the short film was released, while director David Lynch’s Twin Peaks episode “The Return, Part 8” offered a chilling, immersive vision of the psychic horror unleashed by the bomb in 2017. However, despite its non-linear flourishes and handful of psychedelic sequences, Nolan’s retelling of Oppenheimer’s life is effectively a straightforward biopic that remains in his head for its runtime. As such, Oppenheimer couldn’t reckon with the enormity of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki without fundamentally altering its premise.

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[1] Url: https://screenrant.com/oppenheimer-movie-japan-hiroshima-nagasaki-bombings-not-shown-debate/

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