Oppenheimer (2023)

Curious minds want to know... documentary movie collection.

Moderator: Maskath3

Watch Docus Amazon   Docus Merchandise

Documentary movie collection.
Post Reply

Oppenheimer (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

"PROMETHEUS STOLE FIRE FROM THE GODS
AND GAVE IT TO MAN.

"FOR THIS HE WAS CHAINED TO A ROCK
AND TORTURED FOR ETERNITY."

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.

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?

Yes, I can.

The senator from Wyoming.

Admiral Strauss, I'm interested
in your relationship

with Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.

You met him in .

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 w*r, 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 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 w*r?

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 w*r?

A democratic republic being
overthrown by fascist thugs.

Who wouldn't?
-Our government.

They think that socialism
is a bigger thr*at 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.

"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 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 b*mb, Alvarez.

A b*mb.

I told you, Robert,
no more f*cking 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!

I work at Shell.

We've signed up chemists,
we've signed up engineers.

So why not sciences and academia?

Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie!

Teachers are unionized.

Why not professors?

Don't you have somewhere to be?

Lawrence, academics have rights too.

Look, it's not that.
I've got a group coming.

Oh. I'll sit in.
-Not this one.

Richard, Dr. Bush.

What brings you two up north?

Richard, you tell Ruth I'll be
down in Pasadena Thursday.

Paper on black holes, it's in!

Where's Hartland?

Get Hartland.
Get Hartland.

September st, ?
The world's gonna remember this day.

Oh, Hartland, our paper, it's in print.

You've been upstaged.

During the Battle of Britain,
I found myself

increasingly out of sympathy with the...

policy of neutrality
that communists advocated.

But after h*tler invaded Russia
and we became allies,

these communist sympathies,
do they return?

No.

I need to make clear that
my changing views on Russia

did not mean a sharp break from
those who held different views.

For a year or two during
a previous marriage,

my wife Kitty had been
a Communist Party member.

This is where I keep the good stuff.

Well, I thought this was
the Tolmans' house.

I live with them while I'm at Caltech.

Do you two need anything?

We're good, Ruthie.

So, you're a biologist.

Well, somehow I have
graduated to housewife.

Can you explain quantum mechanics to me?

Seems baffling.
-Yes, it is.

Well, this glass,

this drink... this countertop...

Our bodies.

All of it.

It's mostly empty space.

Groupings of tiny energy
waves bound together.

By what?

Forces of attraction strong
enough to convince us

that matter is solid.

Stop my body passing through yours.

You're married to Dr. Harrison.

Not very.

There is someone that I feel...

Does she feel that way?

Sometimes.

Not enough.

You know, I'm going to New Mexico.

To my ranch, with friends.

You should come.

I meant, with your husband.

Yes, you did.

Because you know it won't
make a bit of difference.

Why did you marry him?

I was lost, and... he was kind.

Lost?

Well, my previous husband had d*ed, and...

at , I wasn't really
ready to be a widow.

Who was your first husband?
-Nobody.

My second husband was Joe Dallet.

He was from money, like me,

but he was a union organizer
in Youngstown, Ohio.

I fell hard.

How hard?
-Hard enough to spend the next four years

living off beans and pancakes,

handing out the Daily Worker
at factory gates.

By ' , I just told Joe
I couldn't take it anymore.

Quit the party.

A year later, I wanted him back.

Him, not the Daily Worker. And...

he said: "Swell, I'll meet you
on my way to Spain."

Went to fight for the Loyalists?

And then he went
to the brigades and I waited.

And...

Joe got himself k*lled first time
he popped his head out of the trench.

Ideology got Joe k*lled, for nothing.

The Spanish Republic isn't nothing.

My husband offered both our
futures to stop one fascist b*llet

from embedding itself in a mud bank.

That's the definition of nothing.

Seems a little reductive.
-Pragmatic.

Now here I am.

Wherever the hell this is.

I didn't want you to hear it
from anyone else.

At least you didn't bring me flowers.

We both know I'm not what you want, Jean.

Yeah, but it's a door closing.

No.

Not as far as I'm concerned, no.

You knocked her up. Fast work.

Can't keep a good man down.

I meant her.

She knew what she wanted.

What about the husband?

We talked.

They're getting a divorce,

so we can get married
before she starts showing.

How civilized.

You idiot.

This is your community.

You think the rules don't
apply to the golden boy?

Brilliance makes up for a lot.

Don't alienate the only people in the
world that understand what you do.

One day you might need them.

F-A-E-C-T!

Federation of Architects, Engineers,
Chemists and Technicians.

Lomanitz, what do you get paid a month?

That's not the point, Lawrence.

What do any of you have in common
with farm laborers and dock workers?

Plenty.

Everybody out. Now!

Not you.

What are you doing?

It's a trade union.

Filled with communists.
-So? I haven't joined the party.

They won't let me bring you onto
the project because of this sh*t.

They won't even let me
tell you what the project is.

Oh, I know what the project is.

Oh, really?

We've all heard about Einstein
and Szilard's letter to Roosevelt

warning him the Germans could make a b*mb,

and I know what it means
for the Nazis to have a b*mb.

And I don't?

It's not your people
they're herding into camps.

It's mine.

You think that I tell them
about your politics?

The next time you're
coming home from a meeting,

why don't you take a look
in the rearview mirror,

listen to the sounds on your phone line,
and stop being so g*dd*mn naive?

Why would they care what I do?

Because you're not just self-important,
you're actually important.

Okay.

I get it.

If you could just be a little more...

Pragmatic. I'll talk to Lomanitz,
I'll talk to the others.

You don't have to worry, it's done.

Lawrence.

Then welcome to the w*r.

I filled out my first security
questionnaire and was informed

that my involvement
with left-wing groups would

not prove a bar to my
working on the atomic program.

Why were his communist associations

not seen as a security
risk during the w*r?

Senator, I can't possibly answer

for security clearance granted
years before I ever met the man.

Fine. What about after?

After the w*r, Dr. Oppenheimer was

the most respected
scientific voice in the world.

That's why I asked him
to run the Institute.

That's why he advised
the Atomic Energy Commission.

Simple as that.

What are they accusing me of?

I think they just want to know what
happened between and

to change your mind on
Oppenheimer's security clearance.

I didn't.

I was chair of the AEC, but it wasn't me

that brought the charges against Robert.
-Who did?

Some former staff member of the
Joint Congressional Committee.

He was a rabid anti-communist
named Borden.

He wrote to the FBI
demanding they take action.

The FBI? Why not go to the AEC direct?

You'd get caught
holding the Kn*fe yourself.

What did Borden have against Oppenheimer?

This is the McCarthy era.

People hounded out of jobs
for any hint of red, and...

Reading Oppenheimer's security file,
his communist brother,

sister-in-law, fiancée, best friend, wife.

That's before we even get
to the Chevalier incident.

But how would Borden have access
to Oppenheimer's security file?

Because somebody gave it to him.

Somebody who wanted Robert silenced.

Who?
-Who knows?

Robert didn't take care not to upset
the power brokers in Washington.

His opinions on the atom
became definitive,

and he wasn't always patient
with us mere mortals.

I came in for plenty of harsh treatment.

There was an AEC vote

on the export of isotopes to Norway,

and they drafted in Robert
to make me look like a fool.

But Dr. Oppenheimer, we've
already heard from Admiral Strauss

that these isotopes could be
useful to our enemies

in the production of atomic weapons.

Congressman, you could use a shovel
in making atomic weapons.

In fact, you do.

You could use a bottle of beer
in making atomic weapons.

In fact, you do. I'd say isotopes are

less useful than electronic components,

but more useful than a sandwich.

Genius is no guarantee of wisdom.

How could this man who
saw so much be so blind?

Kitty?

Kitty?

Kitty.

The project.

I'm in.

I'm in!
-Let's celebrate.

Shouldn't you go to him?

I have been going to him all f*cking day.

I don't know how to say this.

I'm ashamed to ask.

Anything.

Take Peter.
-Sure.

No, for a while, Haak.

A while.

Does Kitty know you're here?
-Yes, of course she knows.

Of course she knows.

We're awful people.
Selfish, awful people.

Forget I asked.

Selfish, awful people,

they don't know they're selfish and awful.

Sit, sit, sit.

Robert, you see beyond
the world we live in.

There is a price to be paid for that.

Of course we'll help you.

Everything's changing, Robert.

Having a child was
always going to change...

No, the world is pivoting
in some new direction.

Reforming.

This is your moment.

We're putting together a group to study...
-We shouldn't be doing anything.

You should.

Lawrence won't get this done.

Or Tolman or Rabi. You will.

Who are the uniforms?

I thought you might know.

Dr. Oppenheimer.

I'm Colonel Groves. This is
Lieutenant Colonel Nichols.

Have that dry cleaned.

Well, if that's how you treat
a lieutenant colonel,

I'd hate to see how you treat a...
humble physicist.

If I ever meet one, I'll let you know.

Ouch.
-Theaters of combat all over the world,

but I have to stay in Washington.

Why?
-I built the Pentagon.

The brass likes it so much,

they made me take over
the Manhattan Engineer District.

Which is?
-Don't be a smartass.

You know damn well what it is.

You and half of every physics
department across the country.

That's problem number one.

I thought problem number one
would be securing enough uranium ore.

, tons, bought the day I took charge.
-Processing?

Just broke ground at Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

Now I'm looking for a project director.

And my name came up?

Nope.

Even though you brought quantum physics
to America, which made me curious.

What have you found out?

You're a dilettante, a womanizer,
a suspected communist.

I'm a New Deal Democrat.
-I said "suspected".

Unstable, theatrical,
egotistical, neurotic.

Nothing good, no?

Not even "he's brilliant, but..."

Well, brilliance is taken
for granted in your circle, so no.

No, the only person who had anything
good to say was Richard Tolman.

Tolman thinks you have integrity,

but he also strikes me as a guy who
knows more about science than people.

Yet here you are.

You don't take much on trust.

I don't take anything on trust.

Why don't you have a Nobel Prize?

Why aren't you a general?
-They're making me one for this.

Perhaps I'll have the same luck.

The Nobel Prize for making a b*mb?

Alfred Nobel invented dynamite.

So how would you proceed?

You're talking about turning theory
into a practical w*apon system

faster than the Nazis.
-Who have a -month head start.

.
-How could you possibly know that?

Our fast neutron research took six months.

The man they've undoubtedly put in charge
will have made that leap instantly.

Who do you think they put in charge?
-Werner Heisenberg.

He has the most intuitive understanding
of atomic structure I have ever seen.

You know his work?
-I know him,

just like I know Walther Bothe,
von Weizsäcker, Diebner.

In a straight race, the Germans win.

We've got one hope.
-Which is?

Antisemitism.

What?

h*tler called quantum physics
"Jewish science".

Said it right to Einstein's face.

Our one hope is that h*tler
is so blinded by hate

that he's denied Heisenberg
proper resources,

because it'll take vast resources.

Our nation's best scientists working
together. Right now, they're scattered.

Which gives us compartmentalization.

All minds have to see the whole task
to contribute efficiently.

Poor security may cost us the race.

Inefficiency will.

The Germans know more than us anyway.

The Russians don't.

Remind me, who are we at w*r with?

Somebody with your past doesn't
want to be seen downplaying

the importance of security
from our communist allies.

Point taken, but... no.

You don't get to say no to me.

It's my job to say no to you
when you're wrong.

So you have the job now?

Uh, I'm considering it.

I'm starting to see where
you got your reputation.

My favorite response:

"Oppenheimer couldn't run
a hamburger stand."

I couldn't.

But I can run the Manhattan Project.

There's a way to balance these things.

Keep the Rad Lab here
at Berkeley, under Lawrence.

Met Lab in Chicago, under Szilard.

Large-scale refining, where
did you say, Tennessee?

And Hanford.
-And Hanford.

All America's industrial-minded
scientific innovation,

connected by rail, focused on one goal,

one point in space and time.

And it comes together here,
a secret laboratory.

In the middle of nowhere,
secure, self-sufficient.

Equipment, housing, the works.

Keep everyone there until it's done.

We'll need a school, stores, a church.
-Why?

If we don't let scientists bring their
families, we'll never get the best.

You want security,
build a town. Build it fast.

Where?

Welcome to Los Alamos.

There's a boys' school
we'll have to commandeer,

and the local Indians
come up here for burial rites,

but apart from that, nothing.

miles. Any direction.

We'll have to find the perfect spot.

For?
-Success.

Build him a town. Fast.

Let's go recruit some scientists.

Why would I leave my family?

I told you, you can bring your family.

I'm not a soldier, Oppie.
-A soldier?

He's a general. I've got
all the soldier I need.

What can I tell them?

Heisenberg, Diebner, Bothe and Bohr.
What do these men have in common?

Uh, the greatest minds on atomic theory.
-Yes, and?

As much as you like.

Until you feel my boot on your balls.

You know isotopes, and you know expl*sives
better than anyone in the world.

But you can't tell us what you're doing.

I don't know.
-The Nazis have them.

Niels Bohr's in Copenhagen.

Under n*zi occupation. Did they stop
printing newspapers in Princeton?

Why would we go to the middle of nowhere
for who knows how long?

For a year or two. Or three.

General, could you... give us a moment?

It's about unleashing a strong force.

Before the Nazis do.

Oh my god.

Niels won't work for the Nazis.
-No, never.

But while they have him, we don't.

That's why I need you.

Why would you think I'd do that?

Why? Why?

How about because this is
the most important f*cking thing

to ever happen in the
history of the world?

How about that?

f*ck.

They're not gonna let me
onto this project.

And failing a security check

is not going to be good
for a career even after the w*r.

So you're a fellow traveler. So what?

This is a national emergency.

I've got some skeletons.
They put me in charge.

They need us.

Until they don't.

Is there any chance
of getting Bohr out of Denmark?

Yeah, no dice.
I checked with the British.

Until we get Allied boots back onto
the continent, there's just no way.

Is he that important?

How many people do you know
who proved Einstein wrong?

You know, it really would be
quicker to take a plane.

A plane's too risky.

The country needs us.

What happened, guys?

They say the building's
too small for this cyclotron.

Get them together with the architects.

When's this place supposed to open?

Two months.

Robert, you're the great
improviser, but this...

you can't do in your head.

Four divisions.

Experimental, theoretical, metallurgical.

Who's running theoretical?

I am.

That's what I was afraid of.
You're spread too thin.

So you take theoretical.

I'm not coming here, Robert.

Why not?

You drop a b*mb and it falls
on the just and the unjust.

I don't wish the culmination
of three centuries of physics

to be a w*apon of mass destruction.

Izzy...

I don't know if we can be trusted
with such a w*apon.

But I know the Nazis can't.

We have no choice.

Then...

The second thing you have to do

is appoint Hans Bethe
to run the theoretical division.

Wait, what was the first?

Take off that ridiculous uniform.

You're a scientist.

Groves is insisting we join.

Tell Groves to go sh*t in his hat.

They need us for who we are.

So be yourself.

Only better.

This is the only key.

And Teller's already here.

Shall I just show him in?
-No, let's wait for the others.

Let's get started.

Hello, Edward.
-Yes.

Gentlemen, so, we will work here

until the T Section
at Los Alamos is finished.

Edward, can I...?
-This is more important.

When I calculated the chain reaction,
I found a rather troubling possibility.

No, this can't be right.

Show me how you did your calculations.

Yes.

Exponential.
-No, no, no. No.

This is fantasy.

Teller's calculations can't be right.

Do them yourself while I go to Princeton.

What for?
-To talk to Einstein.

Well, there's not much
common ground between the two.

That's why I should get his view.

Albert.
-Hmm?

Ah, Dr. Oppenheimer.

Have you met Dr. Gödel?

We walk here most days.

Trees have the most inspiring structures.

Albert, might I have a word?

Of course. Excuse me, Kurt.

Some days Kurt refuses to eat.

Even in Princeton, he's convinced
that the Nazis can poison his food.

Whose, whose work is this?

Teller's.

What do you take it to mean?

Neutrons smash into the nucleus,

releasing neutrons
to smash into other nuclei.

Criticality.

Point of no return.
Massive expl*sive force.

But this time, the chain
reaction doesn't stop.

It would ignite the atmosphere.

When we detonate an atomic device,
we might start a chain reaction that...

destroys the world.

So here we are, hmm?

Lost in your quantum
world of probabilities,

and needing certainty.

Can you run the calculations yourself?

About the only thing
you and I have in common

is a disdain for mathematics.

Who's working on this in Berkeley?

Hans Bethe.

Well, he'll get to the truth.

And if the truth is catastrophic?

Then you stop, and you share
your findings with the Nazis.

So neither side destroys the world.

Robert.

This is yours, not mine.

Teller's wrong.

He's wrong.

When you know Teller's critical
assumptions, the real picture emerges.

Bottom line?

The chances of an out-of-control
nuclear reaction are near-zero.

Near-zero.

Oppie, this is good news.

Mm-hmm.

Can you run them again?

Oh, you'll get the same answer.

Until they actually detonate
one of these things,

the best assurance
you're going to get is this.

Near-zero.

Theory will take you only so far.

Hello!
-Hi.

We missed him.

You want to adopt?

She's kidding.

We wanted to see you before we left.

For parts unknown.

You know who I ran into the other day?

Eltenton.

That chemist from Shell?
The union guy?

Yeah, the FAECT guy.

He was moaning about
how we're handling the w*r.

How so?

Lack of cooperation with our allies.

Apparently, our government's not sharing
any research with the Russians.

He said most scientists
think the policy is stupid.

Oh, yeah?
-Yeah.

He mentioned that if anyone had
anything they wanted to pass on,

going around official channels,
that he could help.

That would be treason.

Yes, of course.

I just thought you should know.

The brat is down.

Where are the martinis?

Coming right up.

The conversation ended there.

Nothing in our long-standing friendship
would have led me to believe

that Chevalier was actually
seeking information,

and I am certain that he had no idea
of the work in which I was engaged.

It has long been clear to me that I should
have reported this incident at once.

The Oppenheimer situation
highlights the tension

between scientists
and the security apparatus.

In hopes of learning how
the nominee handled such issues

during his time at the AEC,

we'll have a scientist appearing
before the committee.

Who are they bringing in?

They hadn't said.

Mr. Chairman, if I may,
I'm nominated for Commerce Secretary.

Why seek the opinion of scientists?

This is a cabinet post, Admiral.

We seek a wide range of opinion.

I'd like to know the name
of the scientist testifying.

I'd like the chance to cross-examine.

This is not a court.

Formality, huh?

No presidential cabinet nominee
has failed to be confirmed since .

This is just how the game is played.

It's in the bag, Lewis. So play nice.

They bring in a scientist, so what?

You don't know scientists
like I do, Counselor.

They resent anyone who
questions their judgment,

especially if you're not one of them.

I was chair of the AEC.

I'm easy to blame
for what happened to Robert.

We can't have the Senate thinking

the scientific community
doesn't support you, sir.

Or should we pivot?

To what?
-And embrace it.

"I fought Oppenheimer,
and the US won."

I don't think we need to go there.

Isn't there someone we can call
who knows what really happened?

Teller.
-He'll make an impression.

Can you get the name
of the scientist they've called?

Probably.
-Find out if he was based in Chicago

or Los Alamos during the w*r.

Why does that matter?

Well, if he was based in Chicago,
they worked under Szilard and Fermi,

not the cult to Bobby in Los Alamos.

Robert built that damn place.
He was founder, mayor, sheriff.

All rolled into one.

Now all it needs is a saloon.

There's no kitchen.

Really? We'll fix that.

Barbed wire? g*ns?

Oppie...
-We're at w*r, Hans.

Halifax.

.

A cargo ship carrying munitions
explodes in the harbor.

A vast and sudden chemical reaction.

The biggest man-made expl*si*n in history.

Now, let's calculate how much more
destructive it would have been

if it were a nuclear and
not a chemical reaction,

expressing power in terms of tons of TNT.

But it will be thousands.

Well, then, kilotons.

Using U- ,

the b*mb will need a...
-Uh...

Sorry. Gadget will need
a -pound sphere

about this size,

or using plutonium, a ten-pound sphere.

Here's the amount of uranium
Oak Ridge refined all of last month.

And the Hanford plant
made this much plutonium.

Now, if we can enrich these amounts,
we need a way to detonate them.

Are we boring you, Edward?

A little bit, yes.

May I ask why?

We all entered this room
knowing a fission b*mb was possible.

How about we leave it with something new?

Such as?

Instead of uranium or plutonium,
we use hydrogen.

Heavy hydrogen. Deuterium.

You see, we compact the atoms together

under great pressure
to induce a fusion reaction.

Then we'll get not kilotons, but megatons.

Okay, hang on, hang on.

So how do you generate enough
force to fuse hydrogen atoms?

A small fission b*mb.

There we are!

Well, since we're going
to need one anyway,

can we get back to the business at hand?

The isotopes issue
wasn't your most important

policy disagreement
with Dr. Oppenheimer.

It was the hydrogen b*mb, wasn't it?

As colleagues, we agreed to disagree
on a great many things, uh...

And one of them was the need
for an H-b*mb program, yes.

Thanks for convening on short notice.

I can't believe it.

But here we are. Catch me up.
What do we know?

One of our B- s over the North
Pacific has detected radiation.

Do we have the filter papers?
-There's no doubt what this is.

White House says there's a doubt.
-Wishful thinking, I'm afraid.

Are those the long-range
detection filter papers?

It's an atomic test.

The Russians have a b*mb.

We're supposed to be years
ahead of them, but this...

What were you guys doing in Los Alamos?
Wasn't security tight?

Of course it was. You weren't there.
-Forgive me, Doctor.

But I was there.

We can now consider the
actual mechanics of detonation.

Any ideas?
-I call this sh**ting.

We fire a chunk of fissionable
material into a larger sphere

with enough
force to achieve criticality.

What do we think? Anyone?
-I've been thinking about implosion.

expl*sives around the sphere
blast inwards, crushing the material.

I'd like to investigate that idea.
-I'll talk to ordnance.

Get you blowing things up.

Progress?
-Nice to see you too.

Meet the British contingent.

Dr. Oppenheimer. Klaus Fuchs.

How long have you been British?
-Since h*tler told me I wasn't German.

Ah. Come, welcome to Los Alamos.

The school's up and running.

The bar.
-Always running.

And I thought of a way
to reduce support staff.

Is that...?
-Mrs. Serber, yes.

I've offered jobs to all the wives,
admin, librarians, computation.

We cut down on staff,
keep families together.

Are these women qualified?
-Don't be absurd.

These are some of the
brightest minds in our community.

And they're already security cleared.

I've informed General Groves
you've been holding cross-divisional

open discussions on a nightly basis.
-Shut them down.

Compartmentalization is the key

to maintaining security...
-Only the top men.

Who presumably
communicate with subordinates.

These men aren't stupid.
They can be discreet.

I don't like it.
-You don't like anything enough

for that to be a fair test.

Once a week. Top men only.

I'd like to bring my brother here.
-No.

Nichols?

I still haven't heard that my security
clearance has been approved.

It hasn't.
-I'm going to Chicago tomorrow.

Well, you should wait.

You are aware that the Nazis
have a two-year head start?

Dr. Oppenheimer, the fact
that your security clearance

is proving difficult
to obtain is not my fault.

It's yours.

It may not be your fault, but it's
your problem. Because I'm going.

And how many people were in these, uh...

open discussions?

Too many. Compartmentalization
was supposed to be the protocol.

We were in a race
against the Nazis.

And now the race
is against the Soviets.

Not unless we start it.
-Robert, they just fired the starting g*n.

What's the nature of the
device they detonated?

Data indicates it may have been
a plutonium implosion device.

Like the one you built at Los Alamos.

The Russians have a b*mb.

Truman needs to know what's next.
-What's next? Arms talks.

Arms talks?
-Obviously.

What about the Super?
Does Truman even know about it?

Did we brief him on that?

Not specifically.

We still don't know if a hydrogen
b*mb is technically feasible.

Right, my understanding
is that Teller proposed it.

Yes.
-At Los Alamos?

Teller's designs have
always been wildly impractical.

You'd have to deliver
by oxcart, not airplane.

Oppie!
-I'm sorry, Dr. Lawrence,

do you want to comment?

No.

Because if it can
put us ahead again,

the President of the United States
needs to know about it.

And if the Russians know
about it already from a spy,

at Los Alamos, then
we've got to get going.

There's no proof there
was a spy at Los Alamos.

Robert.

They put it under the football stadium?

The field's not in use anymore.

Just as well.

Oppie!
-Dr. Fermi.

I hear you've got a little town.
-Yes, come and see.

Who could think straight
in a place like that, huh?

Everybody will go crazy.

Thank you the vote
of confidence, Szilard.

Do we really... do we really
need that in the notes?

Are you gonna try it out?

We did.

The first self-sustaining
nuclear chain reaction.

Didn't Groves tell you?

No.

Dr. Oppenheimer?

I tried personnel.

They asked if I could type.
-Can you?

Harvard forgot to teach that on
the graduate chemistry course.

Condon, put Mrs. Hornig
here on the plutonium team.

What the hell were you doing in Chicago?

Visiting the met.
-Why?

You can't...
-Why?

Because we, we have every right...

You have just the rights that
I give you. No more, no less.

We are adults trying to run
a project here. This is ridiculous.

Tell him!

Compartmentalization
is the protocol we agreed to.

Enough of this madhouse.
Nobody can work under these conditions.

You know what?
Generalissimo, I quit!

Thanks for nothing.

Better off without him.

Aren't you more concerned
about his discretion out there?

We'll have him k*lled.

I'm just kidding.

No, he hates me, not America.

You know, General, not everyone
has levers to pull like mine.

I don't think I understand.

You didn't hire me despite my left-wing
past. You hired me because of it.

So you could control me.

No, I'm not that subtle.
I'm just a humble soldier.

You're neither humble, nor just a soldier.
You studied engineering at MIT.

Guilty as charged.
-Well, now we understand each other,

perhaps you can get
me my security clearance,

so I can perform
this miracle for you.

General Groves,
were you aware

of Dr. Oppenheimer's left-wing
associations when you appointed him?

I was aware that there
were suspicions about him.

I was aware he had a very
extreme liberal background.

In your opinion, would he ever
consciously commit a disloyal act?

I would be amazed if he did.

So you had complete
confidence in his integrity?

At Los Alamos, yes. Which
is where I really knew him.

Do you know that your
security officers on the project

advised you against the
clearance of Dr. Oppenheimer?

They could not, and would not,
clear him until I insisted.

And it's safe to say that you
had pretty good knowledge

of Dr. Oppenheimer's security file.
-I did.

Well, then there's only really one
question I need answered here today.

In light of the current AEC guidelines,
would you clear Dr. Oppenheimer today?

Do you have the guidelines?

Under current AEC guidelines,

would you clear Dr. Oppenheimer today?

Physics and New Mexico, huh?

My god. What a trek.

That's why you need a liaison.
-I'm appointing Lomanitz.

You're gonna be okay.
This way, gentlemen.

Dr. Lawrence.
-Leslie.

I'd like to remind you what
we talked about at Berkeley.

Compartmentalization,
I understand completely.

Greetings from Berkeley.

I am here to update you on our
progress and solicit your input.

To do so, I am going to have
to share a few things that

General Groves told me not to.

Sorry General, I said I understood,
not that I agreed.

Okay. Gentlemen, to business!

There were rumors of espionage

at Los Alamos.
-Unsubstantiated.

I'm told that there were communists

on the project.
-We didn't knowingly employ...

I just want to know,
were any of them involved

in discussions of the Super?

I seem to remember you demanding
your brother come to Los Alamos.

My brother had left the party by then.
-What about Lomanitz?

Lomanitz was never employed
at Los Alamos. He was a liaison.

Our security was tight,
as former Colonel Nichols well knows.

Our security was as tight as it could be
given the personalities involved,

but attempts were made.

What is that supposed to mean?
-We've all read his file here.

Do we need to talk about Jean Tatlock?

Or the Chevalier incident?

Excuse me.

Lomanitz, line one!

Hello, Rossi. What?

Okay, just calm down.

There's been another screwup.

Lomanitz just got drafted.
-We are at w*r, Doctor.

Don't be an assh*le, Nichols.
We need this kid. Fix it, will you?

It wasn't a mistake.

Your friend Lomanitz has been
trying to unionize the radiation lab.

He promised to quit all that.
-Well, he hasn't.

The security officer at Berkeley is
concerned about communist infiltration

through that union, the FA...
-FAECT.

While I'm there next week,
I'll... drop in to see him.

Your Q clearance came through.

It's important you not maintain
or renew any questionable associations.

Doctor, did you think social contacts

between a person engaged on secret
w*r work and communists was dangerous?

My awareness of the danger
would be greater today.

I mean, it's fair to say
that during the w*r years,

you felt that such contacts
were potentially dangerous.

Were conceivably dangerous, yes.

I mean, really!

Known communists.

Look...

I've had a lot of secrets
in my head for a long time.

Doesn't matter who I associate with,
I don't talk about those secrets.

You said in your statement

that you had to see Jean Tatlock in .

You left.

Not a word.

What did you think that would do to me?

I wrote.

Pages of nothing.

Where did you go?

I can't tell you.
-Why not?

Because you're a communist.

Why did you have to see her?

She had indicated a great desire
to see me before we left.

At that time I couldn't,
but I felt that she had to see me.

She was undergoing psychiatric treatment.
She was extremely unhappy.

Did you find out why she had to see you?

Because she was still in love with me.

You spent the night together, didn't you?

Yes.

You drop in and out of my life,
and you don't have to tell me why.

And that's power.
-Not that I enjoy.

I'd rather be here for you as you need.

But you have
other priorities now.

I have a wife and child.

That's not what either
of us is talking about.

Jean... you asked me to come.

And I'm glad I did.

But I can't see you again.

But what if I need you?

You said you would
always answer.

Not a word?

Did you think that
consistent with good security?

As a matter of fact, it was.

Not a word.

When did you see her after that?

I never saw her again.

I can make the last
train back to Princeton.

Kitty, I didn't say anything
that I hadn't already told you.

Today you said it to history, didn't you?

This is a closed hearing.

If they don't release the
transcript, I'm sure you will.

I was under oath.
-Well, you were under an oath to me

when you went to see Jean.

You know, you...

You sit there, day after day,

letting them pick our lives to pieces.

Why won't you fight?

Robert, I'm not putting her up there.

Dr. Oppenheimer! This is
an honor. Please, take a seat.

No need. I just wanted to check
whether I should...

talk to Lomanitz while I'm here,
given your concerns.

I'd say that's really up to you,
Professor, but I'd be cautious.

Understood.

Oh, and, um, as regards to the union,

I wanted to give you a heads up
on a man named Eltenton.

A heads up?

Yes, just that he might
bear watching, is all.

I'd love to get more details.

I have an appointment now,
and I leave early tomorrow.

Well, come back
as early as you like.

Since you haven't time now.

You went back the next morning.
-I did. I had to, really.

This time there was another man.

He said his name was Pash.
-Pash. You met Colonel Pash?

Colonel Pash, could you please read
from your memo dated June , ?

"Results of surveillance
conducted on subject

"indicate further possible
Communist Party connections."

"Subject met with and spent
considerable time with one Jean Tatlock,

"a communist, the record
of whom is attached."

The subject being Dr. Oppenheimer?
-Yes.

Whom you had not met?
-Not then, but soon after.

He's the head of security
for the project. Shouldn't I know him?

No, he should know you.

I would never put you in a room with Pash.

Why not?

When Pash first heard about Lomanitz,

he told the FBI he was
going to kidnap him,

take him out on a boat,

and interrogate him in the Russian manner.

General Groves has placed
in me a certain responsibility,

and it's like having a child who
I can't see, by remote control.

So to actually meet you is...

I won't take up too much of your time.
-Oh, no.

Not at all. Whatever time you choose.

Mr. Johnson told me of the
conversation you had yesterday,

which I'm very interested in.
It's had me worried all day.

Yes, well, I didn't want to talk
to Lomanitz without authorization.

That's not the particular
interest that I have.

It's something a little bit more...

In my opinion, more serious.

And then when the FBI pointed out

that such information
wouldn't be admissible in court,

Pash made it clear he had no intention

of leaving any witness left to prosecute.

Now, the FBI talked him down,
but that's the man you're dancing with.

I gather you've heard
there are other parties

interested in the work
of the radiation lab?

A man attached to the
Soviet consul indicated,

through intermediate people,
to people on this project,

that he was in a position
to transmit information.

Well, why would anyone
on the project want to do that?

Frankly, I can see that there might be
an argument for the Commander-in-Chief

informing the Russians,
they're our allies, after all, but...

I don't like the idea of it
going out the back door.

It might not hurt to be
on the lookout for it.

And you said that to Pash.

I was trying to put it in the context
of "Russia's not Germany".

Boris Pash is the son
of a Russian Orthodox bishop.

Born here, but in he went back
to Russia to fight the Bolsheviks.

This is a man who has k*lled
communists with his own hands.

I'm not the judge of who should
or should not have information.

It's my business to stop it
from going through illegally.

Could you be a little more specific?

There's a man whose name was mentioned
to me, a couple of times, Eltenton.

I believe he's a chemist
who works at Shell.

He talked to a friend of his,

who's an acquaintance
of someone on the project.

And you thought Pash
would be satisfied with that?

I was attempting to give them
Eltenton without opening a can of worms.

I told them a cock-and-bull story.

Did you lie to General Groves, too?
-No.

I admitted to him that I'd lied to Pash.

Do you recall this conversation
about the Chevalier incident?

I've seen so many versions of it, uh...

Wasn't confused before,
but I'm certainly getting there now.

And what was your conclusion?
-That he was under the influence

of the typical American
schoolboy attitude

that there's something wicked
about telling on a friend.

Well now, might we know through
whom the contact was made?

That would involve people who
are not to be involved in this.

Is that someone a member of the project?

A member of the faculty, yes,
but not in the project, no.

Ah...

So Eltenton made his approach through
a member of the faculty here at Berkeley.

As far as I know, as far as I know, yes.

But there... may have been...
more than one person involved.

Gentlemen, if I...
if I seem uncooperative,

I think you can understand
it's because of my insistence

on not getting innocent
people into trouble.

You're trying to protect your
friend. Who's protecting you?

Well, you could.

If you gave me the name...
-If you order me to, I'll do it.

That's a mistake, Robert.
You need to volunteer this name.

Did he give you the name?

He did.
-But not then, did he?

No.
-No, in fact,

it was some months later, wasn't it?

It was.

You see me as persistent.
-Well, you are...

you are persistent,
but that is your job.

And, and my job is to protect
the people that work for me.

Instead of us going
on certain steps,

which may come to your attention...

and be disturbing to you,

I would like to discuss
those with you first.

I'm not formulating a plan, I'll just
have to digest the whole thing.

In the months in between your
interview with Dr. Oppenheimer,

and his eventual naming of Chevalier,
did you expend resources trying to find

the name of the intermediary?
-Considerable resources, yes.

Without the name, our job
was extremely difficult.

And when did you receive the name?
-I was gone by the time Oppenheimer

finally offered it up.
-Gone?

They felt my time would
be better spent in Europe,

determining the status
of the n*zi b*mb project.

Who did?

General Groves.

He transferred me to London.

It's a little early for a Christmas party.

Something's up.

Tolman's been away.

Where?

Ruth won't tell.

Come on, Ruthie.

If you can't tell me, who can you tell?

Compartmentalization, Oppie.

What makes you think
I know where he is, anyway?

Because you do a pretty good job

of knowing where
Mr. Tolman is when it counts.

Like now?

Attention!

Early Christmas present for you all.

The British pilot put
me in the b*mb bay.

He showed me the oxygen,
you know, but I messed it up.

Um, when they opened me up
in Scotland, I was unconscious.

But I pretended I'd been napping.

Please enjoy your party.

Is it big enough?
-To end the w*r?

To end all w*r.

Uh, Heisenberg sought me out
in Copenhagen.

It was chilling, my old student
working for the Nazis.

He told me some
things to draw me out.

Sustained fission
reactions in uranium.

That sounds more like
a reactor than a b*mb.

Did he mention
gaseous diffusion?

He seemed more
focused on heavy water.

As a moderator?
-Yes, instead of graphite.

What?

He took a wrong turn.

We're ahead.

And with you here to help us, Niels...

Sorry, could you give us
a moment, gentlemen?

I am not here to help, Robert.

I knew you could do this without me.

Then why did you come?
-To talk about after.

The power you're about to
reveal will forever outlive the Nazis.

And the world is not prepared.

"You can lift the stone without being
ready for the snake that's revealed."

We have to make the politicians
understand this isn't a new w*apon.

It's a new world.

I'll be out there doing
what I can, but you...

You're an American Prometheus.

The man who gave them the
power to destroy themselves.

And they'll respect that.

Your work really begins.

I'm sorry, Oppie, but there's a call.

From San Francisco.

Robert!

Robert?

Robert.

Robert.

God, what's the matter?

What happened?

Her father called.

He found her yesterday in the bath.

Who?

She's taken pills.
Left a note, not signed.

She took barbiturates, but there
was chloral hydrate in her blood.

There was a note.

Jean Tatlock?

We were together.

She said she needed me. I...

I told her I...

I wouldn't...

I told her I...

No, it was me, it was me.

You don't get to commit the sin

and then have us all feel sorry
for you that it had consequences.

Now you pull yourself together.

You know, people here depend on you.

Donald, would you like
to contribute here?

Please, help me out.
-You're on your own, pal.

Bob, I'm not quitting my job
because plutonium is radioactive.

We just don't know what it might do

to the female reproductive system.
-Your reproductive system

is more exposed than mine, presumably.
-Can we please?

The implosion device is nowhere.
-We can't rush everything. Oppie, please.

Well, there's rushing and there's
getting on with it, so pick one.

Wait, wait, wait.
Neddermeyer is doing his job.

Teller's not helping.
You're not helping.

I've been asking for calculations
on the implosion lenses for weeks.

The British can do it. Fuchs.
-Absolutely.

It's your job, Teller.
-I'm engaged in research.

On a hydrogen b*mb
we're not even building!

I won't work with that man.

Oh. Let him go.

He's a prima donna!
-I agree.

He should leave Los Alamos.
-Okay.

Kisti, you replace Neddermeyer.
Seth, I'm putting you on plutonium.

Lilli, you go on for Kisti,
because he needs you.

Fuchs, you take Teller's role.

I'm putting you exclusively
on the implosion device.

And no one is leaving Los Alamos.

They won't let me leave!
-No, I won't let you leave.

Forget Hans, forget fission.

Stay here, research what you want.

Fusion, the hydrogen b*mb, whatever.

We'll meet to discuss it.
-You don't have time to meet.

You're a politician now, Robert. You've
left physics behind many, many years ago.

Once a week.

One hour, you and me.

Now raise this f*cking barrier!

So the Super was under development
on your watch at Los Alamos?

Yes.

And yet, after the w*r,
you tried to deny it was viable.

No, no, no. I pointed out
technical difficulties with it.

Didn't you try to k*ll it
at the AEC meeting

after the Russian b*mb test?
-No.

But that was the recommendation
of the AEC, was it not?

After hours of discussion
about the best response.

An H-b*mb is , times
the power of an A-b*mb.

Its only intended target
would be the largest cities.

It's a w*apon of mass genocide.
-Izzy.

Draw some circles on
this side of the map,

where they would target us,
starting with New York.

That's fair.
-D.C.

It's a w*apon of att*ck
with no defensive value.

Deterrence.
-Deterrence?

Do we really need more deterrence
than our current arsenal of atomic bombs?

You, you drown in ten feet of water
or , , what's the difference?

We can already drown Russia.
They know it...

Now they can drown us with...
-We're just escalating...

As I said, Teller's designs are still as
impractical as they were during the w*r.

A hydrogen b*mb can be made
to work, Oppie. You know that.

I don't believe we should commit
all our resources to that chance.

Then how would you have Truman
reassure the American people?

Simply by limiting the spread
of atomic weapons

through international control
on nuclear energy.

By which you mean world government.

The United Nations, as Roosevelt intended.

Well, I asked what Truman should do,
right? The world's changed.

It's not fascism but communism
that now threatens our survival.

Lewis, do you understand,
if we build a hydrogen b*mb,

the Russians will have no choice
but to build their own?

Could they be working on one already?

Based on information gathered
from the spy at Los Alamos...

No spy at Los Alamos.
-Gentlemen...

There wasn't?
-Let's not get sidetracked.

I say we use this moment to gain
concessions from the Russians

by committing that we will not
build a hydrogen b*mb.

Thereby revealing its existence.

Which you seem convinced
they already know.

Alright.

At this point, I'd like the committee
members to meet in privacy

to finalize our recommendations.

I'm just not sure you
want to go down this route.

Lewis, with respect, we are
the advisory committee.

We will give them our advice.

Good night.

Dr. Oppenheimer? Hi.

William Borden.
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy.

Oh, yes, yes.

During the w*r, I was a pilot.

One night, flying back from a raid,
I saw an amazing sight.

Like a meteor.
A V rocket headed to England.

I can't help but imagine
what it will be

for such an enemy rocket
to carry an atomic warhead.

Let's make sure we're not
the ones to make that possible.

Oppie, I don't think you
want to go up against Strauss.

If we both speak, they listen to me.

When you speak, they hear a prophet.
When Strauss speaks, they hear themselves.

They'll listen to a prophet.

A prophet can't be wrong. Not once.

Did you accuse Oppenheimer of sabotaging
the development of the Super?

I was never one of those
to bandy around terms like sabotage.

But Mr. Borden was?
-As I understand it, possibly.

How was Mr. Borden able to put
together such a detailed indictment?

He was no longer a government employee,
yet he appears to have had

unlimited access
to Dr. Oppenheimer's file.

Might Mr. Nichols have
given him access to the file?

Or someone else at the AEC?

That's a very serious accusation, Senator.

Is it your intention to suggest

that Dr. Oppenheimer is disloyal
to the United States?

I've always assumed, and still assume,
that he's loyal to the United States.

I believe this, and I shall believe it,

until I see very conclusive
proof to the opposite.

Do you or do you not believe that
Dr. Oppenheimer is a security risk?

If I may, look, when h*tler blew
his brains out in that bunker,

it is my humble opinion
that there is no need

for that b*mb to be seen
anywhere except that test site.

Well, we at least have to
take a moment to think about

whether the means justify
the ends any longer because...

Germany is about to surrender.

It's no longer the enemy who are
the greatest thr*at to mankind.

It's our work.

h*tler's dead. It's true.

But the Japanese fight on.

Their defeat seems assured.

Not if you're a G.I. preparing to inv*de.

We can end this w*r.

But how do we justify using
this w*apon on human beings?

We're theorists.

Yes?

We imagine a future,
and our imaginings horrify us.

They won't fear it until
they understand it,

and they won't understand
it until they've used it.

When the world learns
the terrible secret of Los Alamos,

our work here will ensure a
peace mankind has never seen.

A peace based on the kind
of international cooperation

that Roosevelt always envisaged.

Progress?
-Two years and a billion dollars' worth.

Hard to put a price on it.
-Not really, just add up the bills.

Rural free deliveries.
babies delivered the first year.

This year we've had ten, a month.

Birth control is a little
out of my jurisdiction, General.

Clearly.
-General.

Head down, everybody.
Fuchs, head down.

That's the one!

Two viable bombs.

I need a date.

September.

July.

That's the sweet spot, gentlemen.

August.

July.

Tests in July.

But I need my brother.

Frank knows the desert.
He's left politics behind.

He's been working with
Lawrence for two years now.

What do we call the test?

"Batter my heart,

"three-person'd God."

What?

Trinity.

You insisted on bringing on your
brother Frank, a known communist.

Former communist.

You brought a known former communist...

onto America's most secret
and important defense project.

I knew my brother could
be trusted. Absolutely.

And you thought your judgment was sound
on who on the team could be trusted?

Fuchs, head down.

Okay. Everybody ready?

I hope you learned something.
-Yeah, we've learned we're gonna need

to be a lot further away.
-Well, figure it out, fast.

We leave for Washington in the morning.
We're going to give him a date.

You're a long way from Chicago, Leo.

If we don't act now, they're going
to use this thing against Japan.

We booked a meeting with Truman,
but somebody k*lled it.

You're meeting the Secretary of w*r.

Just because we're building it, doesn't
mean we get to decide how it's used.

History will judge us, Robert.

In Chicago, we put together a petition.

I'm not... I'm not
getting into this.

Just tell me your concerns,
and I'll relate them.

My concerns? Germany's defeated.

Japan's not going to hold out alone.

How could you know that?
You got us into this.

You and Einstein, with your letter to
Roosevelt saying we could build a b*mb.

Against Germany.

That's not how weapons
manufacture works, Szilard.

Oppie, you have to help.

Fermi's in the meeting.
Lawrence is in the meeting.

They're not you. You're
the great salesman of science.

You can convince anyone of anything.

Even yourself.

Excuse me.

The firestorm in Tokyo k*lled
, people, mostly civilians.

I worry about America when we
do these things and no one protests.

Pearl Harbor, and three years
of brutal conflict in the Pacific,

buys a lot of latitude
with the American public.

Enough to unleash the atomic b*mb?

Uh, the A-b*mb might not cause as much
damage as the Tokyo bombings.

What are we estimating?

In a medium-sized city, uh...

, or , dead.

Yes, but don't underestimate

the psychological impact
of an atomic expl*si*n.

A pillar of fire, , feet tall,

deadly neutron effects for a mile,

in all directions, from one single device.

Dropped from a barely-noticed B- ,
the atomic b*mb will be...

a terrible revelation of divine power.

If that's true, it would be definitive.

World w*r II would be over.

Our boys would come home.

m*llitary targets?

But there aren't any big enough.

Perhaps a vital w*r plant,

with workers housed nearby.

And we could issue a warning
to reduce civilian casualties.

They'd send everything
they have up against us,

and I'd be up in that plane.

If we announce it,
and it fails to go off,

we'd scupper any chance
of a Japanese surrender.

Is there no way to demonstrate
a b*mb to Japan to provoke surrender?

We intend to demonstrate it in
the most unambiguous terms.

Twice.

Once to show the w*apon's power,

and a second to show that we can
keep doing this until they surrender.

We have a list of
cities to choose from.

Sorry, .

I've taken Kyoto off the list,

due to its cultural significance
to the Japanese people.

Also, my wife and I honeymooned there.

It's a magnificent city.

Let me make this
simple for you, gentlemen.

According to my intelligence,
which I cannot share with you,

the Japanese people will not surrender,

under any circumstances,

short of a successful and total
invasion of the home islands.

Many lives would be lost,
American and Japanese.

The use of the atomic b*mb
on Japanese cities will save lives.

If we retain moral advantage.

How so?
-Well, if we use this w*apon

without informing our allies,
they'll see it as a thr*at,

and we'll be in an arms race.

How open can we
be with the Soviets?

Secrecy won't stop the Soviets from
becoming part of the atomic world.

We've been told they have no uranium.
-You've been misinformed.

A Russian b*mb is a matter of time.

The program needs to
continue at full pace after the w*r.

Secretary Simpson, if I may,

not all scientists on the
project are in agreement.

In fact, this might be a moment
to consider other opinions.

If you talk to scientists...
-The Manhattan Project has been plagued

from the start by certain scientists of...

doubtful discretion,
and uncertain loyalty.

One of 'em just tried to
meet with the President.

Now, we need these men,

but as soon as it's practical,

we should sever any such
scientists from the program.

Wouldn't you agree, Doctor?

If a Russian b*mb is inevitable,

perhaps we should invite
their top scientist to Trinity.

President Truman has no intention
of raising expectations

that Stalin be included
in the atomic project.

Informing him of our breakthrough,

and presenting it as
a means to win the w*r,

need not make
unkeepable promises.

But, the Potsdam Peace Conference in July

will be President Truman's last
chance to have that conversation.

Can you give us a working b*mb by then?

Absolutely.

We will test fire before the conference.

Ground zero. Observation posts

at , yards, north, south, and west.

Where do we trigger from?
-South, , .

And base camp is ten miles south here.

And there's a further observation
post on that hill, miles away.

What's that, Frank?
Trigger lines already went in.

The Air Force requested
a line of lights for their B- .

What B- ? Our b*mb's on the tower.

They want to use the test

to confirm a safe operating distance.
-That's risky.

But not as risky as
dropping one over Japan,

and hoping that we were
right about the blast radius.

Don't let 'em slow us down,
we're f*ring on the th.

The th? That's not...
-The th.

th.

So I'll be here at
South Observation Point

with Frank and Kistiakowsky.

You'll all be assigned to Base Camp,

West Observation, or Far Observation.

Hey, whoa, whoa! Careful with that Kn*fe.

Are those safe distances?

They're based on
your calculations.

Time to stand behind
your science, Hans. Literally.

What about the radiation cloud?

Without high winds,
it should settle within - miles.

Evacuation measures are in place.

But we need good weather
for visibility, so it has to be fine.

Everybody out!

We go on the night of the th.
It's a hard deadline.

So if anyone has anything, speak now.

Okay, stop, stop!
Everybody, mattresses.

Put the mattress there, underneath.

We could use a final implosion test.

It couldn't hurt.
-Do it.

Is there anything else that might stop us?

It's happening, isn't it?

I'll send a message.

If it's gone our way:

"Take in the sheets."

Robert.

Break a leg.

Look.

Oppie's taken a very
modest three kilotons.

Teller's view is .
- !

, tons of TNT.

And does anyone want the side action
on atmospheric ignition?

Are you saying we'll have to delay?

I'm saying it would be prudent.

This weather, has it reached the site?

Bethe is calling to tell you
the implosion test failed.

Hello, Hans? Yes, he's here.

Yes.

Is he wrong?

No.
-No?

No.

So we're about to fire a dud?

No.
-Explain!

Well, I can't. I just, I...

I just know, I know the
implosion lenses will work.

If we fire these detonators
and they don't trigger a reaction,

two years' worth of plutonium will
be scattered across White Sands.

A month of my salary against
ten bucks says it lights.

Oh, Jesus!

The wind's pickin' up at zero,
not the rain. Lightning's circling.

Think it might be time to
tell your men to get away

from the steel tower
with the atomic b*mb?

Let's get to South Observation.

Pull 'em out, and we can
make our determination there.

The team hasn't slept in two nights!

If we stand down and make the b*mb
safe, we won't be back here for weeks!

And we'll miss Potsdam!

I gotta get word to Truman
by seven, our window's closing.

What is this doing?
-Raining, blowing, lightning.

For how long, damnit?
-Holdin' strong!

It'll break before dawn.

How could you know that?
-I know this desert.

Storm cools overnight.
Just before dawn, storm breaks.

You could be right,

but schedule as late as possible.
-Five-thirty.

Sign your forecast.
If you're wrong, I'll hang you.

Tell 'em all. Five-thirty.
-Five-thirty, five-thirty!

Three years, , people,
two billion dollars.

Well, if it doesn't go off,

we're both finished.

I'm betting on three kilotons.

Anything less, they won't get what it is.

Now, what did Fermi mean by,
uh, atmospheric ignition?

Well, we had a moment where
it looked like the chain reaction

from an atomic device might never stop.

Setting fire to the atmosphere.

Why's Fermi still taking side bets on it?

Call it gallows humor.

Wait, are we saying there's a chance
that when we push that button,

we destroy the world?

Nothing in our research over
three years supports that conclusion,

except as the most remote possibility.

How remote?
-Chances are near-zero.

Near-zero?

What do you want from theory alone?

Zero would be nice.

In exactly one hour...

and minutes, we'll know.

It's letting up.

The arming party's left zero,
they're heading this way.

Throw on your switches.

Turn the cars! Ready
for emergency evacuation.

...welder's glass.
Everybody take their places.

Everybody take a welder's glass!

Everybody take a welder's glass!

minutes.

minutes!

That's !

On the leg, please.

Feynman?
-No.

The glass stops the UV.

What stops the glass?

I'm heading to base camp.

Best of luck.

Robert?

Try not to blow up the world.

Watch that needle.
If the detonators don't charge,

and the voltage drops below one volt,

you hit that button,
you abort. Understood?

Understood.

Two minutes to detonation.

Everybody down!

Do not turn around until you
see light reflected on the hills.

Then look at the expl*si*n
only through your welder's glass.

seconds to detonation.

seconds to detonation.

Is it rubbed in?

Yeah.

seconds to detonation.

These things are hard on your heart.

seconds.

Detonators charged!

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Ten.

Nine.

Eight.

Seven.

Six.

Five.

Four.

Three.

Two.

One.

"And now I am become Death...

"the destroyer of worlds."

It worked.

You owe me ten dollars!

Come on!
-I... I'm good for it, Kisti.

You are!

Yes, you are!

Get me Potsdam right away.

Get a message to Kitty.

We can't say anything.
-Tell her to take in the sheets.

Hello?
-Hi, Kitty?

What? What? Charlotte?
Charlotte, go ahead. Go ahead.

Oh, um, well, I don't know,

he just said to tell you
to bring in the sheets.

Kitty?

Kitty? Kitty, are you still there?

If they detonate it too high in the air,
the blast won't be as powerful.

With respect, Dr. Oppenheimer,
we'll take it from here.

Did Truman brief Stalin at Potsdam?

"Brief" would be an overstatement.

He referred to a powerful
new w*apon.

Stalin... hoped we'd use it against Japan.

That's it?

Robert, we've given them an ace.
It's for them to play the hand.

You're aiming for the sixth?

It's up to the CO in the Pacific.

Should I come with you to Washington?

What for?

Well, you keep me informed.

Of course.

As best I can.

Would the Japanese surrender
if they knew what was coming?

I don't know.

Have you seen Szilard's petition?

How the hell does Szilard
know about the Japanese?

You're not signing it, are you?

Many people have.
A lot of people.

Edward...

the fact that we built this b*mb
does not give us any more,

any more right or responsibility

to decide how it's used than anyone else.

But we're the only
people who know about it.

I've told Stimson the various
opinions of the community.

But what's your opinion?

Once it's used...

nuclear w*r, perhaps...

all w*r...

becomes unthinkable.

Until somebody
builds a bigger one.

I thought they would call.

It's only the fifth.

In Japan, it's the sixth.

Charlotte?

Try Groves.

Anything?

Charlotte?
-Truman's on the radio.

hours ago,

an American airplane

dropped one b*mb on Hiroshima,

and destroyed its
usefulness to the enemy.

The b*mb has more power

than , tons of TNT.

It is an atomic b*mb.

It is a harnessing of the
basic power of the universe.

Groves on one.

General?

I'm very proud of you,
and all of your people.

It went alright?

Apparently it went with a tremendous bang.

Well, everyone here is feeling
reasonably good about it.

It's been a long road.

I think one of the
wisest things I ever did

was when I selected
the director of Los Alamos.

We have spent more
than two billion dollars

on the greatest scientific
gamble in history,

and we have won.

Oppie! Oppie! Oppie!

The world...

will remember this day.

It's too soon to...

It's too soon to determine

what the results of the bombing are.

But I'll bet the Japanese didn't like it.

I'm so proud.

So proud of what you have accomplished.

I just wish we had it in time
to use against the Germans.

Dr. Oppenheimer?

Dr. Oppenheimer?

Nice picture.

President Truman will see you now.

Dr. Oppenheimer, it's an honor.

Mr. President.
-Please.

Thank you.

Secretary Byrnes.

How's it feel to be the most
famous man in the world?

You helped save a lot of American lives.

What we did at Hiroshima was...
-And Nagasaki.

Obviously.

Your invention let us
bring our boys home.

Well, it was hardly... my invention.

It was you on the cover of Time.

Jim tells me you're concerned
about an arms race with the Soviets.

Ah, yes, ah...

Well, um...

it's that, uh, now is
our chance to secure...

international cooperation
on atomic energy,

and-and-and I'm concerned...

Do you know when the Soviets
are gonna have the b*mb?

I don't think I could give a...

Never!

Never.

Mr. President, the Russians
have good physicists,

and, and abundant resources...
-Abundant?

Yes.

I don't think so.

Well, they'll put
everything they have in...

I hear you're leaving Los Alamos.

What should we do with it?

Give it back to the Indians.

Um, Dr. Oppenheimer...

if what you say about
the Soviets is true,

we have to build up Los Alamos,
not shut it down.

Mr. President...

Umm...

I feel that I have
blood on my hands.

You think anyone
in Hiroshima, or...

Nagasaki, gives a sh*t who built the b*mb?

They care who dropped it.

I did.

Hiroshima isn't about you.

Dr. Oppenheimer.

Don't let that crybaby back in here!

Robert saw that
hand-wringing got him nowhere.

By the time I met him, he'd fully embraced

his "Father of the b*mb" reputation.

And used his profile to influence policy.

Doctor, in the years
following the w*r,

would you say that you
exerted a great influence

on the atomic policies of the USA?

I think "great" would
be an overstatement.

Really? I mean, look
at the issue of isotopes.

Were you not personally responsible for
destroying all opposition to their export?

...could use a bottle of beer

in making atomic weapons. In fact, you do.

I was the spokesman, but the opinion
among scientists was unanimous.

All along, with McCarthy on the rise,
he knew he was vulnerable.

His brother was blacklisted
by every university in the country.

Lomanitz wound up working
the railroad, laying track.

Chevalier went into exile.

But none of that stopped Robert

from pushing the GAC
to recommend arms control,

instead of the H-b*mb.

He was devastated when Truman
rejected their recommendation.

I miss Richard more than I can bear.

I know, Ruth. I know.

I'm just glad he didn't live
to see where this has all gone.

Here comes the
birthday boy, to gloat...

Have fun.

Robert, my son and his fiancée

are desperate to meet the
father of the atomic b*mb, so...

Hello.

Is this a bad time?

What do you think, Lewis?

Well, I think it must have
been a blow for you.

For the world.

The world? What does Fuchs
mean to the rest of the world?

Fuchs?

Klaus Fuchs?

Oh dear. You haven't heard.

Klaus Fuchs, the British scientist

that you put onto the
implosion team at Los Alamos.

Turns out he was...

He was spying for the
Soviets the whole time.

I'm sorry.

After the truth about
Fuchs came out,

the FBI stepped up surveillance on him.

He knew his phone was tapped.

He was followed everywhere.

His trash picked through.

But he never stopped
speaking his mind.

A man of conviction.

And maybe he thought fame
could actually protect him.

When Eisenhower took office,
he saw one more chance.

He took it.

America and Russia may be likened...

to two scorpions in a bottle.

Each capable of k*lling the other,

but only at the risk of his own life.

Now, there are various
aspects of this policy...

A lot of scientists blame me,
but how was I supposed to protect him?

...are too secret for discussion.

Candor is the only remedy.

Officials in Washington need to start
leveling with the American people.

That was the last straw
for Robert's enemies.

So he had to lose
his security clearance.

And with it, his credibility.

But how could they do it?

He was a w*r hero.

He'd already told everyone about his past.

Borden dredged it all up.

How could Borden get access
to Oppenheimer's FBI file?

Could it have been Nichols?

No, I can't imagine he'd do that.

Whoever did unleashed a firestorm
that b*rned a path in the White House,

right to my desk at the AEC.

You seen 'em in there, right?

I've worked my whole life to get here.

The cabinet of the
United States of America,

and now, in front of the entire country,

they want to put me back in my place.

A lowly shoe salesman.

Lewis, we can win this thing.

I think we can get the Senate to grasp

that you did your duty,
painful though it was.

Now, will Hill's testimony back us up?
-Hill will be fine.

I don't really know him, but he was
one of Szilard's boys in Chicago.

And they'd never forgave Robert for not

supporting the petition
against bombing Japan.

This was taken days after the bombing.

Virtually everyone in the streets,
for nearly a mile around,

was instantly and seriously...

b*rned.

The Japanese spoke of people who

wore striped clothing, upon whom
the skin was b*rned in stripes.

There were many who
thought themselves lucky,

who climbed out of the
ruins of their homes,

only slightly injured.

But they d*ed anyway.

They d*ed days, or weeks later,

from iridium-like rays
emitted in great numbers

at the moment of the expl*si*n.

Did you read this
crap in the papers?

A British physicist is saying

the atomic bombings were
not the last act of World w*r II,

but the first act of this
cold w*r with Russia.

Which physicist?

I think you knew him.
Patrick Blackett.

He may not be wrong.
Stimson is now telling me

we bombed an enemy that
was essentially defeated.

Robert, you've all the influence now.

Please,

urge them to continue
my research on the Super.

I neither can nor will, Edward.

Why not?

It's not the right use of our resources.

Is that what you really believe?

J. Robert Oppenheimer?
Sphinx-like guru of the atom?

Nobody knows what you believe.

Do you? Hmm?

One final time, our program director,
Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.

I hope that in years to come,

you will look back
on your work here with pride.

But today, that pride must be tempered
with a profound concern.

If atomic weapons are to be added
to the arsenals of a warring world,

then the day will come when people
will curse the name of Los Alamos.

Uh, sorry, Admiral.

Stopped off to get this.

Seems pretty favorable.

There's Oppenheimer. What's the caption?

Uh, "J. Robert Oppenheimer.
Strauss fought him...

"and the US won."

That'll work.

Those were your words from the other day.

We needed to pivot.

But how would you know what
Time Magazine was gonna write?

Henry Luce is a friend.

You sat here and let me
tell you how it's done,

but you've been
far ahead all along.

Survival in Washington.

It's about knowing how to get things done.

Right.

What was it you said about Borden?

Why get caught holding
the Kn*fe yourself?

I'm beginning to think Borden
was holding the Kn*fe for you.

It's gonna come down
to how much influence

Borden's been able to exert on Teller.

Did I say something funny?

Just "Borden, Borden, Borden",
when we all know that it's Strauss.

Lewis brought me
to Princeton, Kitty.

And then you humiliated
him in front of Congress.

But more useful than a sandwich!

How'd I do?

Maybe a little too well, Robert.

That was six years ago.

You know, they're truly vindictive,
patient as saints.

Strauss has been perfectly
clear that he is neutral.

Wake up! It is Strauss!

It's always been Strauss, and you know it!

Why won't you fight him?

It wasn't Nichols, or Hoover,
or one of Truman's guys.

It was you.

You gave the file to Borden.

You set him on Oppenheimer.

You convinced him...
-Borden...

didn't take any convincing.

Take your time,
use the entire file.

Write up your conclusions,
send them to the FBI.

The material's obviously extensive,

but there's nothing new here.

Your conclusions will be.

And they'll have to be answered.

Hoover passes them to McCarthy?

Oppenheimer's too slippery
for that self-promoting clown.

I've talked it over with Hoover.

He'll hold McCarthy at bay
while you do this with the AEC.

Trial?
-No, no trial.

You can't give Oppenheimer a platform.

You can't martyr him.

We need a systematic destruction
of Oppenheimer's credibility,

so he can never again speak
on matters of national security.

Then what?

A shabby little room.
Far from the limelight.

A simple bureaucratic procedure.
His Q clearance. It's up for renewal.

You send your accusations to the FBI...

Hoover sends them to the AEC.
You're forced to act.

You write up an indictment.

You tell Oppenheimer his security
clearance is not being renewed.

But offer him the chance to appeal.

As you can see, Robert,
it's not yet signed.

May I keep this?
-No.

If you do decide to appeal,
they'll have to send you a copy.

When he appeals, and trust me,
he will, I appoint a board.

They will, of course, have counsel.

Prosecutor?
-In all but name.

Who?
-Roger Robb.

Ouch.

Robb will have security clearance
to examine Oppenheimer's file.

As will the Gray Board.
Defense counsel will not.

A closed hearing.

The so-called interrogatory information
in your indictment of me...

No audience, no reporters,
no burden of proof.

No burden of proof?

We're not convicting.

We're just denying.

What is it you said?

This is just how the game is played.

Well, forgive my naivete.

Amateurs seek the sun, get eaten.

Power stays in the shadows.

But, sir, you're... you're
out of the shadows now.

Yeah, that's why this has to work.

Well...

Teller's testifying this morning.

That'll help. And then...

Hill is in the afternoon.

Hill is gonna help us too.

As you can see, Robert,
it's not yet signed.

May I keep this?
-No.

If you do decide to appeal, then
they'll have to send you a copy.

Take my car and driver, I insist.

I'll have to consult my lawyers, Lewis.

Of course. But don't take too long.

I can't keep Nichols at bay.

I'm sorry it's come to this, Robert.

I think it's wrong.

Nichols wants me to fight,
so he can get it all on the record.

Strauss wants me to walk away.

Strauss knows that you can't do that.
You'd be accepting the charges.

You'll lose your job.

You will lose your reputation.
We'll lose our house.

Robert, we have to fight.

As AEC counsel, I can't represent you.

I'll call Lloyd Garrison.

Oh, he's good.

The best, but I have to warn you.

This won't be a fair fight.

During your interview with Boris Pash
in , did you refer to microfilm?

No.
-Tab , page one, paragraph three.

You never said, "man of the consulate,
expert in the use of microfilm"?

I'm sorry, I'm sorry...
-No.

I would like to know what document
Mr. Robb is quoting from,

and if we might be furnished with a copy.

The document is classified, Mr. Garrison.

I think we should get back
to firsthand information.

This is firsthand.

How so, Roger?

There was a recording of the interview.

You let my client sit here
and potentially perjure himself,

and all this time, you had a recording?

Nobody told your client to
misrepresent his former answers.

Misrepresent? It was years ago!

Can we hear this recording?

You don't have the
clearance, Mr. Garrison.

But you're reading
it into the record!

Please, please. Is this proceeding
interested in entrapment or in truth?

If it's truth, where's the disclosure?
Where's the witness list?

Mr. Garrison, this isn't a trial,
as you are well aware.

Evidentiary rules do not apply.
We are dealing with national security.

Yes, sir, with all due respect,

I fail to see how national security
prevents the prosecution from

providing us with a list of witnesses!
-Perhaps we are in need

of a brief recess.
-Gentlemen. You have my words.

If you say they're from
a transcript, then I'll accept it.

I've already explained
I made up a cock-and-bull story.

And why would anyone make up
such an elaborate story?

Because I was an idiot.

Why lie?

Well, clearly with the intention of not
revealing who the intermediary was.

Your friend, Haakon Chevalier,
the communist.

Is he still your friend?

Yes.

Dr. Rabi, thank you for coming.

You know who else the
prosecution has called?

Teller, obviously.
They've asked Lawrence.

What did he say?
-He wasn't going to help them,

but...
-But?

Strauss told him that you and Ruth Tolman
had been having an affair for years.

The whole time you lived
with them in Pasadena.

He convinced Lawrence that
Richard d*ed of a broken heart.

That's absurd.
-What part?

A broken heart.
Richard never found out.

Is Lawrence gonna testify?

I don't know.

Dr. Rabi, what governmental
positions do you currently hold?

I am the chairman of the
general advisory committee

to the AEC, succeeding
Dr. Oppenheimer.

And how long have you
known Dr. Oppenheimer?

Since . I... I know him quite well.

Well enough to speak to the bearing
of his loyalty and character?

Dr. Oppenheimer is a man
of upstanding character.

And he is loyal to the
United States, to his friends,

to the institutions of which he is part.

Eat.

Who was that?

Nothing to worry about.

After the Russian A-b*mb test,

did Dr. Lawrence come to see you
about the hydrogen b*mb?

You'd be better off asking him.

Well, I fully intend to.

Would you say that Dr. Oppenheimer
was unalterably opposed to the H-b*mb?

No, he, he thought that a fusion program

would come at the expense
of our awfully good fission program.

But that proved not to be the case.

In the event, both could be done.

Suppose that this board
did not feel satisfied

that in his testimony here
Dr. Oppenheimer had been wholly truthful,

what would you say whether
or not he should be cleared?

Why go through all this against a man

who has accomplished
what Dr. Oppenheimer has?

Look at his record.

We have an A-b*mb,
and a whole series of it.

We have a whole series of Super bombs.
What more do you want?

Mermaids?

But I've known Secretary
Strauss for many years.

And I feel it a necessity
to express the warm support

for science and scientists
Lewis has shown.

We'll break now.

Unless there's any immediate business.
-Senator, I'd like to once again request

that we're furnished
with a list of witnesses.

And I will remind the nominee

that we don't always have
that information in advance.

We do know that Dr. Hill
will be here after lunch.

Mr. Chairman, our next
scheduled witness, Dr. Lawrence,

has apparently come down with colitis.

So we'll proceed with
William Borden instead.

Mr. Borden, welcome. Please take a seat.

Mr. Borden,

during your investigation
into Dr. Oppenheimer,

did you reach certain conclusions?

I did.
-And did there come a time

when you expressed those conclusions
in a letter to Mr. J. Edgar Hoover,

of the Federal Bureau of Investigation?
-That is correct.

Prior to the writing of the letter,
did you discuss the writing of the letter

with anybody attached to the
Atomic Energy Commission?

I did not. -Excellent.

Do you have a copy of the letter?
-I have one in front of me.

Would you please be
so kind as to read it, sir?

"Dear Mr. Hoover,
the purpose of this letter

"is to state..."
-I'm sorry, I'm sorry, if I could have...

What is the purpose of the delay?
He's simply going to read the letter.

Mr. Chairman, this is the first
I've seen of this letter.

And I see statements here, at least one,

of a kind that I don't think anyone
would like to see go into the record.

These are accusations that
have not previously been made,

that are not part of the
indictment from Nichols.

Accusations of a kind that
I don't think belong here.

The witness wrote this letter
on his own initiative,

laying out evidence that has
already been before the board.

His conclusions are valid testimony,

just like the positive conclusions
of friends of Dr. Oppenheimer.

It cuts both ways.

How long has counsel been
in possession of this letter?

I don't think I should be subject to
cross-examination by you, Mr. Garrison.

Mr. Garrison, given that we
on the board have all read the letter,

wouldn't it be better
to have it in the record?

Let's proceed.

"Dear Mr. Hoover,

"the purpose of this letter
is to state my opinion,

"based upon years of study
of the available classified evidence,

"that, more probably than not,

"J. Robert Oppenheimer
is an agent of the Soviet Union.

"The following
conclusions are justified.

"One, between and ,
more probably than not,

"J. Robert Oppenheimer was
a sufficiently hardened communist

"that he volunteered
information to the Soviets.

"Two, more probably than not,

"he has since been functioning
as an espionage agent.

"Three.

"More probably than not, he has
since acted under a Soviet directive

"in influencing
United States m*llitary policy."

I'm sorry, Robert.
-"Atomic energy, intelligence and..."

Is anyone ever going to tell the truth
about what's happening here?

We will now hear from Dr. David Hill.

Dr. Hill, would you care
to make a statement?

Thank you.

I've been asked to testify
about Lewis Strauss,

a man who has given years of service
in high positions of government,

and who is known to be earnest,
hard-working, and intelligent.

The views I have to express are my own,

but I believe that much I have
to say will help to indicate why

most of the scientists in this country
would prefer to see Mr. Strauss

completely out of government.

You're referring to the hostility
of certain scientists,

directed toward Mr. Strauss,
because of his commitment to security,

as demonstrated in the Oppenheimer affair?

No.

Because of the personal vindictiveness
he demonstrated against Dr. Oppenheimer.

Order! Order!

It appears to most scientists
around this country

that Robert Oppenheimer
is now being pilloried,

and put through an ordeal, because
he expressed his honest opinions.

Dr. Bush, I thought I was
performing a service to my country

when hearing this case.
-No board, in this country,

should sit in judgment of a man
because he expressed his strong opinions.

If you want to try that case,
you should try me.

Excuse me, gentlemen,
if I've... become stirred.

But I am.

Dr. Hill, we've already heard that
Mr. Strauss did not bring the charges,

or participate in the hearings
against Dr. Oppenheimer.

The Oppenheimer matter was...

initiated, and carried through, largely
through the animus of Lewis Strauss.

Oppenheimer made mincemeat
out of Strauss's position

on the shipments
of isotopes to Norway,

and Strauss never forgave him
this public humiliation.

Another controversy between them centered
around their differences in judgment

on how the H-b*mb would
contribute to national security.

Strauss turned to the personnel
security system in order to

destroy Oppenheimer's effectiveness,

and Strauss was able
to find a few ambitious men

who also disagreed with Oppenheimer's
positions and envied him

his prestige in government circles.

I've always assumed, and still assume,
that he is loyal to the United States.

I believe this, and I shall believe it,

until I see very conclusive
proof to the opposite.

Do you or do you not believe that
Dr. Oppenheimer is a security risk?

In a great number of cases, I have
seen Dr. Oppenheimer act in a way

which was, to me, exceedingly
hard to understand.

I thoroughly disagreed with
him in numerous issues,

and his actions frankly appeared to me
confused and complicated.

To this extent, I feel I want to see
the vital interests of this country

in hands which I understand better,
and therefore trust more.

Thank you, Doctor.
-Thank you.

I'm sorry.

You shook his f*cking hand!?

Oh, I would have spit in his face.

I'm not sure the Board
would have appreciated that.

Is it not gentlemanly enough for you?

Well, I think you're all
being too g*dd*mn gentlemanly.

Gray must see what Robb is doing.
Why doesn't he just shut him down?

And you, shaking Teller's hand.

You need to stop playing the martyr.

Under the current AEC guidelines,
would you clear Dr. Oppenheimer today?

Under my interpretation
of the Atomic Energy Act,

which did not exist when I hired
Dr. Oppenheimer in ,

I would not clear him today
if I were on the commission.

Good. Thank you, General. That is all.

But I don't think I'd clear
any of those guys.

That's all.

Dr. Oppenheimer had no
responsibility in the selection

or the clearance of Klaus Fuchs, did he?

No. None at all.

And you wouldn't want to leave this
board with any suggestion today that

you're here questioning his
basic loyalty to the United States

in the operation of Los Alamos?

By no means. I hope I didn't lead anyone
to believe otherwise for an instant.

Thank you, General.

Okay. We shouldn't keep them waiting.
-She'll be here.

Do you even want her here?

Only a fool or an adolescent presumes

to know someone else's relationship,
and you're neither, Lloyd.

Kitty and I are grown-ups.

We've walked through fire together.

She'll do fine.

Would you describe your views
on communism as pro, anti, neutral?

Very strongly against.

I've had nothing to do with
communism in, since...

since . Since...

Since before I met Robert.

That's all.

The record demonstrates that
Oppenheimer was not interrogated

by impartial and disinterested
counsel for the Gray Board.

He was interrogated
by a prosecutor who used

all the tricks of a rather
ingenious legal background.

You are charging now that the
Gray Board permitted a prosecution.

If I were on the Gray Board,

I would have protested against the tactics

of the man who served in fact
as the prosecuting counsel.

A man appointed not by the Board,

but by Lewis Strauss.

Who was this?

I'm sorry?

Who was this?

Roger Robb.

Mrs. Oppenheimer.

Did you have a Communist Party
membership card?

I'm... I'm not sure.

Not sure?

Well...

Well?

I mean, presumably,
the act of joining the party

required sending some money
and receiving a card, no?

Sorry.

Yes.

It's just, it was all so very long ago,
Mr. Robb, wasn't it?

Not really.
-Long enough to have forgotten.

Did you return the card, or rip it up?
-The card whose existence I've forgotten?

Your Communist Party membership card?
-Haven't the slightest idea.

Can a distinction be made between
Soviet communism and communism?

Well, in the days when I was a member,

I thought they were definitely two things.
-Oh?

I thought that the Communist
Party of the United States

was concerned with our domestic problems.
I now no longer believe this.

I believe the whole thing's linked
together and spread all over the world,

and I have believed this since
I left the party years ago.

But...
- years ago. My mistake.

But you...
-Sorry, .

years ago.

Are you familiar with the fact your
husband was making contributions

to the Spanish Civil w*r as late as ?

I knew that Robert
gave money from time to time.

Did you know this money was going
into Communist Party channels?

Don't you mean through?
-Pardon?

I think you mean through
Communist Party channels, don't you?

Yes.
-Yes?

Yes.
-Yes.

Then would it be fair to say
that this meant that by ,

your husband had not stopped having
anything to do with the Communist Party?

You don't have to answer that yes or no,
you can answer that any way you wish.

I know that, thank you.
It's your question.

It's not properly phrased.

Do you understand what I'm getting at?
-I do.

Then why don't you answer it that way?
-Because I don't like your phrase,

"having anything to do
with the Communist Party,"

because Robert never had anything to do
with the Communist Party as such.

I know he gave money
to Spanish refugees.

I know he took an intellectual
interest in communist ideas.

Are there two types of communists?

Intellectual communists,
and your plain old regular commie?

Well, I couldn't answer that one.

I couldn't either.

Good evening.

Robert, you can't win this thing.

It's a kangaroo court with
a predetermined outcome.

Why put yourself through more of it?

I have my reasons.

Alright.

Good night.

He has a point.

I'm not sure you understand, Albert.
-No?

I left my country, never to return.

You served your country well.

If this is the reward
she offers you, then...

perhaps you should
turn your back on her.

Damn it, I happen to love this country.

Then tell them to go to hell.

Interestingly enough, this is
no longer a confirmation hearing.

It's now a trial...

about a trial!

For god's sakes!

It's not good he's telling everyone
you initiated the hearings.

He can't prove a g*dd*mn thing.

He certainly can't prove
that I gave the file to Borden.

We're not in court, sir.
There's no burden of proof.

Right, they're not convicting.

They're just denying.

Why would Hill come here
to tear me down? What's his angle?

Do people need a reason
to do the right thing?

As he sees it.
-I told you.

Oppenheimer's been poisoning
the scientists against me

right from that first meeting.

I don't know what Oppenheimer
said to him that day,

but Einstein wouldn't even meet my eye.

Oppenheimer knows
how to manipulate his own.

At Los Alamos,

he preyed on the naivete of scientists

who thought they get a say
in how we use their work.

They'll never think he was
that naive himself.

Doctor, during your work
on the hydrogen b*mb,

were you... deterred
by any moral qualms?

Yes, of course.

But you still got on with
your work, didn't you?

Yes, because this was work of exploration,

it was not the preparation of a w*apon.

You mean it was more
of an academic excursion?

No, it is not an academic thing,
whether you can build a hydrogen b*mb.

It's a matter of life and death.

By , you were actively
pushing the development

of the hydrogen b*mb, weren't you?

Pushing is not the right word.

Supporting it and working on it, yes.

So when did these moral
qualms become so strong

that you actively opposed the
development of the hydrogen b*mb?

When it was suggested that it be
the policy of the United States

to make these things at all costs,

without regard to the balance
between these weapons

and atomic weapons as part of our arsenal.

What do moral qualms have to do with that?

What do moral qualms have to do with it?
-Yes.

Oppenheimer wanted to own the atomic b*mb.

He wanted to be
The Man Who Moved the Earth.

He talks about putting the
nuclear genie back in the bottle.

Well, I'm here to tell you that I know,

J. Robert Oppenheimer, if he could
do it all over, he'd do it all the same.

You know he's never once
said that he regrets Hiroshima?

He'd do it all over. Why?

Because it made him the most
important man who ever lived.

We freely used the atomic b*mb.

In fact, Doctor, you assisted
in selecting the target

to drop the atomic b*mb
on Japan, didn't you?

Yes...
-Well then, you knew, did you not,

that by dropping that atomic b*mb
on the target you selected,

that thousands of civilians would be
k*lled or injured. Is that correct?

Yes, not as many as turned out.

Oh. Then how many were k*lled or injured?

, .
- , , both Hiroshima and...

, to both.
-On the day of each bombing?

Yes.
-Yes.

And in the weeks and years that followed?

It has been put at somewhere
between , and , .

, dead, at least.

Yes.
-Any moral scruples about that?

Terrible ones.

But yet you testified in here that the
bombing of Hiroshima was very successful.

Technically successful.
-Oh! Technically it was very successful.

And it is also alleged
to have helped to end the w*r.

Would you have been supportive of the
dropping of a hydrogen b*mb on Hiroshima?

That would make no sense at all.

Why?
-The target is too small.

Well, supposing there
had been a target in Japan

big enough for a thermonuclear w*apon,

would you have been opposed
to the dropping of it?

This was not a problem
with which I was confronted.

Well, I'm confronting
you with it now, sir.

It was all part of his plan.

He wanted the glorious,
insincere guilt of the self-important

to wear like a f*cking crown and say,

"No, we cannot go down this road,"
even as he knew we'd have to.

Would you have been opposed
to the dropping of a thermonuclear w*apon

on Japan because of moral scruples?
-Yes, I believe I would, sir.

Did you oppose the dropping
of an atomic b*mb on Hiroshima

because of moral scruples?

We set forth our...
-No, you, you, you, you!

I'm asking you...
-I set...

You, you, you!
-I set forth our arguments

against dropping it,
but I did not endorse them.

You mean after working night and day
for three years building the b*mb,

you then argued against the use of it?

I was asked by the Secretary of w*r
what the views of scientists were.

I gave them the views against
and the views for.

You supported the dropping
of the atom b*mb

on Japan, didn't you?
-What do you mean...

You supported it...
-What do you mean, support?

Well, you helped pick
the target, didn't you?

I did my job. I was not in a
policy-making position at Los Alamos.

I would have done anything
I was asked to do.

Well, then, you would have built
the H-b*mb too, wouldn't you?

But I couldn't...
-I didn't ask you that, Doctor!

And the GAC report, which you co-authored
after the Soviet atomic test said:

"A Super b*mb should never be built!"

What we meant, what I meant...

What you, who?
-Look, what I meant...

Who?

Well, wouldn't the Russians do anything
to increase their strength?

If we did it, they would have to do it!

Our efforts would only fuel their efforts,

just as it had with the atomic b*mb!

Just as it had with the
atomic b*mb, exactly!

No moral scruples in , plenty in .

Dr. Oppenheimer...

when did your strong moral convictions
develop with respect to the hydrogen b*mb?

When it became clear to me

that we would tend
to use any w*apon we had.

J. Robert Oppenheimer the martyr,
I gave him exactly what he wanted.

To be remembered for Trinity,

not Hiroshima!

Not Nagasaki!

He should be thanking me.

Well, he's not.

Do we still have enough votes?

Or is the crowning moment of my career

about to become the most
public humiliation of my life?

Full Senate's about to vote.

You'll scrape through.

Great, then gather the f*cking press.

Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, this board,

having heard testimony from you

and many of your current
and former colleagues,

has come to the unanimous conclusion
that you are a loyal citizen.

However...

In the light of your
continuing associations,

and disregard for the security
apparatus of this country,

together with your
somewhat disturbing conduct

on the hydrogen b*mb program,

and the regrettable lack of candor

in certain of your
responses to this board,

we have voted, two-to-one,

to deny the renewal
of your security clearance.

A full written opinion,
with a dissent from Mr. Evans,

will be issued to the AEC
in the coming days.

That is all.

Robert.

Robert.

Don't...

Don't take in the sheets.

Two minutes. Two minutes!

You'll get your sh*t!

Is it official?

Well, there were a couple
of unexpected holdouts.

I'm denied. Yeah?

I'm afraid so, sir.
-Alright.

Who were the holdouts?

Um, there were three.

Led by the junior senator
from Massachusetts.

Young guy trying to make
a name for himself,

didn't like what you did to Oppenheimer.

What's his name?

Uh, Kennedy.

John F. Kennedy.

Kitty?

Did you think that if you
let them tar and feather you,

then the world would forgive you?

It won't.

We'll see.

You told me I'd be okay.

Yeah, well, I didn't have
all the facts, did I?

Here's a fact.

President Eisenhower pinned the
Medal of Freedom on my chest last year,

because I've always done
what's right for this country.

They don't want me in the cabinet room?
Well, that's... that's fine.

Maybe they should just
invite Oppenheimer instead.

Maybe they will.

I told you. He turned
the scientists against me,

one by one, starting with Einstein.

I told you about that. Einstein.
Einstein by the pond.

You did, but you know, sir,
since nobody...

really knows what they
said to each other that day,

is it possible they didn't
talk about you at all?

Is it possible they spoke
about something, uh...

more important?

Thank you.

Albert.

The man of the moment.

You once held a reception
for me in Berkeley.

You gave me an award, hmm?
-Yes.

You all thought that I had lost the
ability to understand what I'd started.

So...

The award really wasn't for me,
it was for all of you, hmm?

Now it's your turn

to deal with the consequences
of your achievement.

And one day, when they've
punished you enough,

they'll serve you salmon and potato salad.

Make speeches.

Give you a medal.

Hello, Frank.

You're happy, I'm happy.

Pat you on the back,
tell you all is forgiven.

Just remember...

it won't be for you.

It'll be for them.

Albert...

when I came to you
with those calculations,

we thought we might start a chain reaction

that would destroy the entire world.

I remember it well. What of it?

I believe we did.
Post Reply