Oppenheimer
Watching Oppenheimer is a lot like watching The Passion of Joan of Ark, the 1928 Dreyer film. Despite the veneer of a historical epic, most of the plot boils down rather pettily to a sham audience between the titular martyr and a group of vile men tasked with assassinating their character. Joan burned at the pyre while Oppie merely got his security clearance revoked, though you can draw a symbolic parallel between witch hunts and witch burnings in there.
Both movies are also primarily made up of intense closeups of faces. "Passion" famously contains what for the longest time was considered the best performance ever captured on film (Maria Falconetti as Joan); also famously the movie splurged an unprecedented fortune on a realistic, life-sized, interconnected movie set meant to recreate a medieval fortress... which you don't even see in the finished thing, because the movie is 98% Joan's face and her accusers' faces. The producers got really angry about that.
Now you have Oppenheimer playing on IMAX and being sold like a must-see IMAX cinematic experience - even though, again, 98% of the movie is peoples' faces. It's all closeups, baby. Closeups of old, stuffy men in crummy rooms. The Trinity Test, and an apocalyptic vision, are the two sole set-pieces in the middle of the movie. Lots of faces in nondescript rooms before and after. Cillian Murphy gives a brilliant, haunted, enigmatic performance.
Actually he kinda looks a little bit like Falconetti.
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