drboffa
Well-known member
I'm going to buck the trend and say that I found Oppenheimer pretty underwhelming. I realize I'm in the minority—and some critics who I really align with in other ways consider it a masterpiece—but it just didn't work for me.
It was fine. The cinematography was impressive, but I'm not sure it was all that better than any other top tier movies I've seen in recent memory. The sequence leading up to the Trinity test was well done—probably the best part of the movie, in my view.
Otherwise it felt like a 3+ hour montage (I think I'm ripping that from someone else but I can't recall who). And while it wasn't quite Oppenheimer hagiography in the way I'd feared it also didn't, in my view, grapple with the story or implications in a deep or nuanced way. I walked out of it without a real sense that Nolan had given me anything to really think about (not uncommon for me with his films).
Killers of the Flower Moon, on the other hand, was a masterpiece...
It was fine. The cinematography was impressive, but I'm not sure it was all that better than any other top tier movies I've seen in recent memory. The sequence leading up to the Trinity test was well done—probably the best part of the movie, in my view.
Otherwise it felt like a 3+ hour montage (I think I'm ripping that from someone else but I can't recall who). And while it wasn't quite Oppenheimer hagiography in the way I'd feared it also didn't, in my view, grapple with the story or implications in a deep or nuanced way. I walked out of it without a real sense that Nolan had given me anything to really think about (not uncommon for me with his films).
Killers of the Flower Moon, on the other hand, was a masterpiece...