(soft music continues) Albert. (pensive music playing)
Oppenheimer
2.8s
(muffled distant rumbling)
Oppenheimer
2.9s
ROGER ROBB: Why did you leave the United States?
Oppenheimer
1.8s
(clamoring)
Oppenheimer
3.2s
(unsettling music continues)
Oppenheimer
24s
I, uh... I wanted to study the new physics. GRAY: 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. (unsettling music playing)
Oppenheimer
4.2s
SENATE AIDE: How long did he testify? Honestly, I forget.
Oppenheimer
1.6s
I have known him for years.
Oppenheimer
6.9s
- Oh, no, not you, Oppenheimer. - (students laughing) You finish coating those plates. STUDENT 1: You see them? (students laughing)
(scoffs) This is one of the most prestigious appointments in the country. Yes, with a great commute. That's why I'm considering it. SENATOR McGEE: So, Dr. Oppenheimer brought your attention to his past associations before you appointed him? Yes. And it didn't concern you? Just then, I was entirely consumed with what he must have said to Einstein to sour him on me. (laughter)
Oppenheimer
2.8s
- (rumbling) - (metallic clinking)
Oppenheimer
32.7s
Admiral Strauss, I'm interested in your relationship with Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. You met him in 1947? Correct. You were commissioner of the Atomic Energy Commission? I was, but I-I actually met Robert in my capacity as board member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton because after the war, he was world-renowned as the great man of physics, and I was determined to get him to run the Institute. (birds chirping) (soft music playing)