Come on, Ruthie. Can't tell me, who can you tell? RUTH: Compartmentalization, Oppie. What makes you think I know where he is anyway? ROBERT: 'Cause you do a pretty good job of knowing where Mr. Tolman is when it counts. Like now? GROVES: Attention! (chatter and music subside)
Oppenheimer
4.1s
These things are hard on your heart. MAN (on speaker): Thirty seconds.
Oppenheimer
2.9s
- I'd love to introduce you. - No need.
Oppenheimer
4.9s
(pensive music playing) Did you have a Communist Party membership card?
Oppenheimer
54.9s
Christ's sake. (door slams) It wasn't Nichols or Hoover or one of Truman's guys. It was you. You gave the file to Borden. You set him on Oppenheimer. - You convinced him to... - (loudly): Borden... (in normal tone): didn't take any convincing. NICHOLS: Take your time, use the entire file. Write up your conclusion, send them to the FBI. The material is obviously extensive, but there's nothing new here. STRAUSS: Your conclusions will be. And they'll have to be answered. Hoover passes them to McCarthy? Oppenheimer's too slippery for that self-promoting clown. I've talked it over with Hoover, he'll hold McCarthy at bay while you do this with the AEC. - A trial. - No. No trial. You can't give Oppenheimer a platform. You can't martyr him. We need a systematic destruction of Oppenheimer's credibility so he can never again speak on matters of national security. Then what?
Oppenheimer
9.4s
Well, I'd love to get more details. Well, I... I have an appointment now and I leave early tomorrow. Well, come back as early as you like. Since you haven't time now.
Oppenheimer
9s
I don't know if we can be trusted with such a weapon. But I know the Nazis can't.
Oppenheimer
11.6s
Anything less, they won't get what it is. What did Fermi mean by "atmospheric ignition"? Well, we had a moment where it looked like the chain reaction from an atomic device might never stop.
Oppenheimer
1.6s
KISTIAKOWSKY: Yeah.
Oppenheimer
1m44s
No. Because of the personal vindictiveness he demonstrated against Dr. Oppenheimer. (people exclaiming) - MAGNUSON: Order. - (gavel banging) Order! It appears to most scientists around this country that Robert Oppenheimer is now being pilloried and put through an ordeal because he expressed his honest opinions. Dr. Bush, I thought I was performing a service to my country when hearing this case. No board in this country should sit in judgment of a man because he expressed strong opinions. If you want to try that case, you should try me. Excuse me, gentlemen, if I become stirred, but I am. Dr. Hill, we've already heard that Mr. Strauss did not bring the charges or participate in the hearings against Dr. Oppenheimer. The Oppenheimer matter was initiated and carried through largely through the animus of Lewis Strauss. (people exclaim) Oppenheimer made mincemeat out of Strauss's position on the shipment of isotopes to Norway, and Strauss never forgave him this public humiliation. Another controversy between them centered around their differences in judgment on how the H-bomb would contribute to national security. Strauss turned to the personnel security system in order to destroy Oppenheimer's effectiveness, and Strauss was able to find a few ambitious men who also disagreed with Oppenheimer's positions and envied him his prestige in government circles. TELLER: I've always assumed, and still assume, that he's loyal to the United States. I believe this. And I shall believe it until I see very conclusive proof to the opposite. Do you or do you not believe that Dr. Oppenheimer is a security risk?
Oppenheimer
1.9s
(sighs)
Oppenheimer
1.3s
(sighs)
Oppenheimer
2.2s
ROBERT: Los Alamos.
Oppenheimer
12.4s
No, thank you. It's a long way to Zurich. You get any skinnier, we're gonna lose you between the seat cushions. I'm Rabi. Oppenheimer. I caught your lecture on molecules. Caught some of it.
Oppenheimer
18.1s
The biggest man-made explosion in history. Now let's calculate how much more destructive it would have been if it were a nuclear and not a chemical reaction. Expressing power in terms of tons of TNT. But it will be thousands. Well, then kilotons.
Oppenheimer
43.1s
FRANK: Ground zero observation posts at 10,000 yards north, south and west. - Where do we trigger from? - Uh, south 10,000. And base camp is ten miles south, here. And there's a further observation post on-on that hill 20 miles away. What's that, Frank? Trigger lines already went in. The Air Force requested a line of lights for their B-29. What B-29? Our bomb's on the tower. FRANK: They want to use the test to confirm a safe operating distance. That's risky. Not as risky as dropping one over Japan and hoping that we were right about the blast radius. Don't let them slow us down, we're firing on the 15th. - The 15th? That's not... - GROVES: The 15th. The 15th.
Oppenheimer
2.8s
We're just denying.
Oppenheimer
3.8s
- They won't let me leave. - ROBERT: No. I won't let you leave.