00:00This is a national emergency.
00:04Our work here will ensure peace mankind has never seen.
00:09The world will remember this day.
00:26I don't know why.
00:28I've always been fascinated with this event and the history around it.
00:33This is a film about people, people coming together to try and pull something off
00:37against impossible, seemingly impossible odds.
00:40So this was the theatre where we first showed Memento anywhere in the world
00:44and now it's the first theatre anywhere in the world where we will show Oppenheimer
00:48on 70mm film.
00:50The reaction so far has been amazing.
00:52It's a film designed for theatres, you know, for IMAX.
00:57It's less of a film and more of an experience.
00:59Chris likes to describe it as 3D without the glasses.
01:02I think the thing that Chris does really well with his movies is he sort of
01:06makes films that really live with people after they've left the theatre.
01:09I mean, I don't think Chris makes films that are didactic in any way.
01:14I feel he likes the open-endedness of asking really profound questions
01:19but sort of not giving you the answers.
01:21Chris Nolan takes it as an assumption that the audience is intelligent
01:25and I appreciate that.
01:27Every single detail he put in was so that people can see it
01:30in its largest possible format.
01:32I don't know if we can be trusted with such a weapon.
01:41But we have no choice.
01:44What Chris gave, I think, all of us was an amazing script.
01:47All my experience with Chris has always been real sets.
01:50So you experience it as the characters would.
01:53It's a more visceral and honest response, I think, you get.
01:56It was completely pure and completely real
01:59and exactly what acting should be like.
02:01It felt like an old-school type of film that you wouldn't really see these days.
02:04Well, I mean, you're hearing what people are saying
02:06and you're hearing what they're saying.
02:08It's a very different kind of film.
02:11Well, I mean, you're hearing what people are saying about the film.
02:14It literally is a cinematic experience.
02:18Chris has said that he's the most important man that ever lived.
02:21It was a huge role, a huge responsibility.
02:23It's not just ideas, it's the soul, it's the heart
02:26about something that affects all of us
02:28and could have changed the history of this planet.
02:31Part of the appeal of the story, what makes it dramatic,
02:34is that told right, and we've done our best,
02:37when the film finishes, there'll be a lot of interesting questions,
02:39a lot of resonances.
02:41Is that Mao quote when he was asked
02:44what he thought about the French Revolution
02:46and he said, it's too soon to tell.
02:49You know, we really don't know all of the benefits or cost
02:54of what this man in this group,
02:56what this man and his leadership have done for this planet,
02:59and the story is still going to play out.
03:01You are the man who gave them the power to destroy themselves
03:06and the world is not prepared.
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03:15Truman needs to know what's next.
03:172
03:18What's next?
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