Found 707 results

Video-background
15.4s
Is there any chance of getting Bohr out of Denmark? Nah, 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?

Oppenheimer

Video-background
5.9s
Dr. Oppenheimer. An honor. Mr. Strauss. It's pronounced "straws."

Oppenheimer

Video-background
2m42s
(door closes) 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 shit. They won't even let me tell you what the project is. Oh. (scoffs) 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 bomb, and I know what it means for the Nazis to have a bomb. Oh, 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 goddamn naive. Why would they care what I do? (scoffs) Because you're not just self-important, you're actually important. Okay. 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 war. ROBERT: 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. SENATOR PASTORE: Why were his Communist associations not seen as a security risk during the war? Senator, I can't possibly answer for security clearance granted years before I ever met the man. Fine. What about after? After the war, 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 1947 and 1954 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? Why get caught holding the knife yourself? What did Borden have against Oppenheimer? This was the McCarthy Era. People hounded out of jobs for any hint of red. And then, 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.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
8.6s
Did you ever encounter Heisenberg again? Not in person, no, but, uh... you might say our paths crossed.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
6.6s
(baby continues crying) (Kitty moans) Shouldn't you go to him? (uneasy music playing)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
1.9s
BARBARA: Come here, darling.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
1.5s
(sighs)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
2.5s
Not as far as I'm concerned, no.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
16.3s
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. (chuckles softly)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
7.4s
On returning to America, I accepted positions at both Caltech and up at Berkeley. (indistinct chatter)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
2.3s
ROBERT: Who are the uniforms?

Oppenheimer

Video-background
7.5s
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.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
2.5s
(music ends) The senator from Wyoming.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
4.2s
Yeah, but it's a door closing. No.

Oppenheimer

Video-background
2.6s
(wistful music playing)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
10.2s
One day you might need them. F.A.E.C.T. MEMBERS (chanting): F.A.E.C.T.! ROBERT: The Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Technicians. (chanting stops)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
3.6s
(shushing) (knock at door)

Oppenheimer

Video-background
40.2s
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 might and 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. It'll need a school, stores, a church. Why? ROBERT: 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?

Oppenheimer